Xbox Series X vs. PS5 Pro: Is the Performance Gap Real?
At the start of the generation, the Xbox Series X wore the crown as the world’s most powerful console with its 12 Teraflops of GPU power. However, with the release of the PS5 Pro, Sony has introduced advanced machine-learning upscaling and dedicated ray-tracing hardware. Does the “old” King still hold its own, or has the gap become too wide to ignore?
Technical Specs Comparison
| Feature | Xbox Series X | PS5 Pro |
|---|---|---|
| GPU Power | 12.1 TFLOPS (RDNA 2) | 16.7 TFLOPS (RDNA 3 Hybrid) |
| AI Upscaling | FSR 2.1 (Software-based) | PSSR (Hardware AI-based) |
| Ray Tracing | Standard | 2x – 3x Faster Hardware RT |
| Launch Price | $499 | $699 |
The PSSR Advantage: AI vs. Pixels
The biggest difference you will see on your TV is PlayStation Spectral Super Resolution (PSSR). On the Xbox Series X, if a game struggles to hit 60FPS, it drops its resolution, sometimes looking blurry. The PS5 Pro uses AI to “fill in the gaps,” allowing games to run at a lower internal resolution but look incredibly sharp on a 4K screen. Currently, Xbox lacks a dedicated AI chip to rival this technology.
Where Xbox Still Wins
- Value for Money: The PS5 Pro is significantly more expensive and does not include a disc drive. To match the Series X’s features (Disc Drive + Stand), a PS5 Pro setup costs nearly $800.
- Backward Compatibility: The Series X still offers the best “look” for older games. Its Auto HDR and FPS Boost features apply to thousands of OG Xbox, 360, and One titles that the PS5 Pro cannot enhance in the same way.
- Consistent Power: In non-AI optimized games, the raw 12-Teraflop power of the Series X still matches the PS5 Pro’s performance in many “Standard” 4K modes.
Frequently Asked Questions
Only if you are a “visual purist” who must have the highest possible frame rates in ray-traced games. For 90% of players, the Series X remains more than capable of delivering a high-end 4K experience.
Microsoft has not announced a mid-gen refresh. Instead, they have focused on the **1TB and 2TB “Galaxy Black”** revisions, which offer more storage but identical internal performance to the 2020 model.
