Xbox One

Xbox One
Top: original Xbox One with Kinect sensor
Middle: Xbox One X
Bottom: Xbox One S
DeveloperMicrosoft
ManufacturerFlextronics, Foxconn
Product familyXbox
TypeHome video game console
GenerationEighth
Release date
  • NA/EU/AU/SA: November 22, 2013
  • JP: September 4, 2014
  • CHN: September 29, 2014
Introductory priceUS$499 (equivalent to $670 in 2024)
€499
Discontinued
  • WW: 2020
Units soldSee Sales section
Units shipped58+ million
Media
Operating systemXbox System Software
CPU
  • Original & S: 1.75 GHz 8-core AMD APU (2 × quad-core Jaguar modules)
  • X: 2.3 GHz 8-core AMD APU (2 × quad-core Evolved Jaguar modules)
Memory
  • Original & S: 8 GB DDR3 (5 GB available to games)
  • X: 12 GB GDDR5 (9 GB available to games)
Storage
  • Original: 500 GB or 1 TB HDD, 1 TB SSHD
  • S: 500 GB, 1 TB or 2 TB HDD
  • X: 1 TB HDD
Display
Graphics
  • AMD Radeon (built into APU)
  • Original: GCN 853 MHz, 1.3 TFLOPS
  • S: GCN 914 MHz, 1.4 TFLOPS
  • X: GCN 40 CUs @ 1.172 GHz, 6 TFLOPS
Sound7.1 surround sound, Dolby Atmos, DTS:X
InputHDMI
Controller inputXbox Wireless Controller, Kinect, keyboard, mouse
Camera1080p camera (Kinect)
Connectivity
Current firmware10.0.25398.2923
Online servicesXbox Live, Xbox Game Pass
Dimensions
  • Original: 3.1 × 13.1 × 10.8 in (79 × 333 × 274 mm)
  • S: 2.5 × 11.6 × 9.0 in (64 × 295 × 229 mm)
  • X: 2.36 × 11.81 × 9.45 in (60 × 300 × 240 mm)
Weight
  • Original: 7.7 lb (3.5 kg)
  • S: 6.4 lb (2.9 kg)
  • X: 9.8 lb (4.4 kg)
Best-selling gamePUBG: Battlegrounds (9 million)
Backward
compatibility
Selected Xbox and Xbox 360 games
PredecessorXbox 360
SuccessorXbox Series X/S
Websitexbox.com/xbox-one

The Xbox One is a home video game console developed by Microsoft. Announced in May 2013, it is the successor to Xbox 360 and the third console in the Xbox series. It was first released in North America, parts of Europe, Australia, and South America in November 2013 and in Japan, China, and other European countries in September 2014. It is the first Xbox game console to be released in China, specifically in the Shanghai Free-Trade Zone. Microsoft marketed the device as an "all-in-one entertainment system", hence the name "Xbox One". An eighth-generation console, it mainly competed against Sony's PlayStation 4 and Nintendo's Wii U and later the Nintendo Switch.

Moving away from its predecessor's PowerPC-based architecture, the Xbox One marks a shift back to the x86 architecture used in the original Xbox; it features an Accelerated Processing Unit (APU) from AMD built around the x86-64 instruction set. Xbox One's controller was redesigned over the Xbox 360's, with a redesigned body, D-pad, and triggers capable of delivering directional haptic feedback. The console places an increased emphasis on cloud computing, as well as social networking features and the ability to record and share video clips or screenshots from gameplay or livestream directly to streaming services such as Mixer and Twitch. Games can also be played off-console via a local area network on supported Windows 10 devices. The console can play Blu-ray Disc, and overlay live television programming from an existing set-top box or a digital tuner for digital terrestrial television with an enhanced program guide. The console optionally included a redesigned Kinect sensor, marketed as the "Kinect 2.0", providing improved motion tracking and voice recognition.

The Xbox One received positive reviews for its controller design, multimedia features and quieter internals, but criticism was initially given to its user interface. A revised version replaced the original in 2016, called the Xbox One S, which has a smaller form factor and support for HDR10 high-dynamic-range video, as well as support for 4K video playback and upscaling of games from 1080p to 4K. It was praised for its smaller size, its on-screen visual improvements, and its lack of an external power supply, but its regressions such as the lack of a native Kinect port were noted. A high-end model, named Xbox One X, was unveiled in June 2017 and released in November; it features upgraded hardware specifications and support for rendering games at 4K resolution. The system was succeeded by the Xbox Series X and Series S consoles, which launched on November 10, 2020. Production of all Xbox One consoles ceased at the end of that year.