
Microsoft this week revealed itβll no longer be making the Xbox One X or the Xbox One S digital edition. Instead, itβll be focusing on the Xbox Series X, its new baby β though itβll continue to sell the standard Xbox One S for the foreseeable future.
In a statement to The Verge, a spokesperson said βAs we ramp into the future with Xbox Series X, weβre taking the natural step of stopping production on Xbox One X and Xbox One S All-Digital Edition. Xbox One S will continue to be manufactured and sold globally.β Word of console shortages, the One X included, has been going around since the COVID-19 pandemic started, and discontinuing these will likely cause a run on the ones still on store shelves.
This seems like a strange move for Microsoft, given its stance on the next-generation transition. Microsoft has made a big to-do about the Series X not being essential for the Xbox gaming ecosystem upon launch. In other words, as it wonβt have launch exclusives and is built to allow you to only buy next-gen games once even if you play them on current consoles, it seemed to be implying the transition would be gradual. This is in contrast to Sonyβs approach of βBuy our new console or you canβt play our newest gamesβ β both approaches are valid, but up to now we thought we knew which one each company was taking.
As for why itβs stopping production on the consoles, there are likely different reasons for each one. A persistent industry rumor has it that Xbox is planning to reveal a second βXbox Seriesβ console, a completely digital version codenamed βLockhart.β If true, itβd be easy to see why the company would want to replace the One S digital edition (which has only been on the market a year) with a new digital-only console.
Regarding the Xbox One X, the reasons for stopping production on that are perhaps a bit less substantive. If I may speculate, it could be because the One Xβs raison dβetre is to be a more powerful Xbox One, the most powerful console on the market β a claim to fame which will be moot as soon as the Series X and the PlayStation 5 hit the market. This could also help boost Lockhartβs profile, as the second console would be probably be on a comparable power level to the One X, and thereβs no need to muddy the waters.
If these reasons are close to the mark, itβs actually good strategy on Microsoftβs part: keep the Xbox One S on the market just to say you that you did, but make sure thereβs no real competition for the next-gen hotness. If gamers want a disc-less Xbox, thereβs Lockhart. If they want the really powerful console, thereβs the Series X.
Of course, there could be a practical reason why Microsoft might not want to be making four (possibly five) consoles at once: with the pandemic putting resources in a squeeze, Microsoft probably wants to put everything it has into its newest generation. Either way, if you really wanted to own an Xbox One X or a One S digital, nowβs your chance to go out and get one.
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