For the past several months both Microsoft and Sony have been slowly but steadily trickling out additional details about their forthcoming gaming consoles. And now this morning we’re getting our next bit of information from Microsoft, who has released a few more nuggets of information on their forthcoming Xbox Series X console.

When the console was first formally announced at the end of 2019, the company revealed that it would be using AMD’s Zen 2 CPU cores, but they were a bit cagier about the GPU specifications. Now the company has opened the door just a bit more on those, giving us some performance and feature information – and by and large confirming earlier theories about what the hardware would entail.

First and foremost, Microsoft is now confirming that the console’s APU is using AMD’s RDNA 2 architecture for the integrated GPU. Information about this architecture is still limited, but AMD previously disclosed that RDNA 2 would include hardware ray tracing functionality – something not present in RDNA (1) – and Microsoft in turn will be tapping this for their next game console. Microsoft, of course, already has significant experience with hardware ray tracing thanks to DirectX’s own ray tracing functionality (DXR), so the company will be able to hit the ground running here, albeit with AMD hardware for the first time.

Microsoft’s announcement also confirms for the first time that we’re getting Variable Rate Shading (VRS) support. This is another feature that has been supported in DirectX for a bit now (and in rivals Intel & NVIDIA’s GPUs), but isn’t currently available in AMD’s RDNA (1) lineup. A sampling optimization of sorts, variable rate shading allows for the shading rate for an area of pixels to be increased or decreased from the normal 1:1 ratio. The net impact is that an area can be oversampled to produce finer details, or undersampled to conserve resources. As the former is more of a niche use case for VR, we’re far more likely to see undersampling in day-to-day usage. Especially with complex pixel shaders, when used correctly VRS is intended to give developers a way to improve the performance of their games for little-to-no perceptible impact on image quality.


VRS: Visually Represented (Image Courtesy NVIDIA)

Finally, as far as overall GPU performance is concerned, Microsoft’s latest revelation finally gives us a performance estimate: 12 TFLOPs. While the company doesn’t break this down into clockspeed versus compute units, this is none the less twice the GPU performance of the Xbox One X. Or for a more generational comparison, more than 9x the GPU performance of the original Xbox One.

Even at just 2x the performance of the Xbox One X, this is by all objective measures quite a bit of GPU horsepower. To put things in perspective, AMD’s current fastest RDNA-based video card, the Radeon RX 5700 XT, only offers 10 TFLOPs of GPU performance. So the Xbox Series X, a device with an integrated GPU, is slated to offer more graphics performance than AMD’s current flagship video card. Which, to be sure, doesn’t mean the Xbox Series X is going to be more powerful than a PC (there’s no getting around the fact that AMD has been trailing NVIDIA here), but it’s clear that Microsoft has great ambitions for the console’s graphics performance.

Tangential to this, Microsoft has also finally confirmed that the console will support HDMI 2.1. This has long since been a given, as the time frame and Microsoft’s own resolution goals pretty much require HDMI 2.1 to begin with, but none the less we finally have confirmation. The company’s announcement also confirms that along with variable refresh rate support (first introduced on the Xbox One X), the console’s HDMI connection will also support HDMI’s auto low latency mode, which tells a display to switch to low latency mode. Depending on just how fine-grained Microsoft’s implementation is, there’s room here for nuance; for example only engaging low latency mode for gaming, but leaving it off when watching videos so that a display can apply extra processing.

Finally, while Microsoft had previously disclosed that the console would use a “next generation” SSD, it’s interesting to note that the company is now calling it a “custom built” SSD. Absent more details, I’d hesitate to read too much into this, but at a minimum it means Microsoft is not using an entirely off-the-shelf SSD. Whether that means they’re using commercial silicon with different firmware, or ordering their own silicon entirely, remains to be seen. And perhaps the bigger question is whether this is an all-flash setup, or if the console will be running some kind of tiered storage with an SSD and an HDD? Given that even when SSD prices were at their historical lows, a large enough SSD to hold several AAA games could easily run for $100 or more, a pure SSD setup stands to be an expensive venture.

But whatever the storage architecture is, it sounds like Microsoft is putting it to good use. On top of the previously mentioned loading benefits, the company is touting a feature they’re calling “Quick Resume”, which allows for several games to be suspended at once. Since suspending multiple games in this fashion all but requires evicting them from RAM and sending them to non-volatile storage, Microsoft will need a high performance (and reasonably spacious) SSD to power this feature.

As always, expect to hear a lot more about the Xbox Series X over the next several months, as Microsoft ramps up to launch it for Holiday 2020.

Source: Microsoft

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  • nathanddrews - Monday, February 24, 2020 - link

    You can swap out the built-in drive for an SSD or other HDD, but only up to 2TB. Even if you install a 4TB SSD, you can only use half of it. Microsoft is stupid, there's no reason to do this. It's not like the PS4 has suffered because of expandable storage.
  • Korguz - Monday, February 24, 2020 - link

    " Microsoft has been known to have custom storage for XBox even with original " and that means ?? if i remember right when i was bored and took my xbox apart, it had a standard 3.5 sata hdd in it, made by seagate if i remember right, how is that " custom storage " ??
  • sandtitz - Tuesday, February 25, 2020 - link

    The hard drive was 100% standard but the hard drive was locked with a secret password, using ATA security feature set. You couldn't just replace the hard drive with another one without modding and deciphering the EPROM password with 3rd party tools.
  • Korguz - Tuesday, February 25, 2020 - link

    not really custom.. just password protected, while using a feature of the sata spec.
  • quiksilvr - Thursday, February 27, 2020 - link

    Still a pain in the ass for no reason when the competition allows you to swap just fine without jumping through ridiculous hoops.
  • Reflex - Monday, February 24, 2020 - link

    It is likely to still support USB drives, and the dev kits have a CFExpress slot on the back.
  • Valantar - Monday, February 24, 2020 - link

    MS has been far better than Sony in supporting external storage for the current generation, no reason for that to change.
  • PeachNCream - Monday, February 24, 2020 - link

    I guess I should have said "no aftermarket internal storage upgrade" instead. External drives are perfectly fine given the fixed position nature of consoles like these, but I prefer keeping clutter down and instead adding a higher capacity internal drive as price-for-capacity declines over a console's lifespan.
  • WinterCharm - Tuesday, February 25, 2020 - link

    You can always attach an external drive via USB (something like a Samsung T5 portable SSD). With USB 3.2 hitting 10Gbps it'll be enough for loading games quickly.
  • HStewart - Monday, February 24, 2020 - link

    Personally this is first console generation, that I am personal going to like skips.

    I had original XBox, XBox 360, and Playstation, Playstation 2, Playstation 3 but was going to skip the last generation but XBox One S had HD 4k support - which I move on to actually players since.

    It is odd sign of times when a lot of people out there today are younger then the first console generations. 1994 for Playstation and 2001 for XBox

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