Monday, April 3rd 2023
WD Plans to Muscle in on Xbox Series X|S Storage Expansion Card Scene
It appears that Western Digital is readying its own line of Xbox Series X|S Storage Expansion cards, and undercutting its big rival - Seagate - in a currently exclusive storage solution market. Word spread across several gaming communities over the past weekend about a new listing on Best Buy, now removed as of late April 2, for a 1 TB capacity WD_BLACK C50 Expansion Card with an asking price of $179.99. WD has offered official external storage solutions for the current generation of Xbox home games consoles, under its WD_BLACK range, but Microsoft granted exclusive manufacturing rights to Seagate for the proprietary Xbox Series X|S storage expansion card system. According to official site information and documentation, these expansion cards are effective in "delivering additional external memory while maintaining the same peak speed and performance as the console's internal SSD".
The Seagate range could have been a timed exclusive, and based on the now deleted Best Buy listing, Microsoft seems to have handed a license to WD. The 1 TB WD_BLACK C50 Expansion Card's pricing was a big talking point, due to it being substantially cheaper than the equivalent capacity Seagate model ($219.99) - a saving of forty dollars, which is an encouraging sign for gamers who have long complained that the Xbox proprietary expansion card offers bad value for money. Seagate's current crop of cards start at $139.99 (512 GB) and go up to $399.99 (2 TB).Sony famously decided not to utilize a proprietary storage solution for its PlayStation 5 home console, and owners are allowed to upgrade via an industry standard M.2 SSD expandable storage slot. It has been widely reported that the PS5 can be fitted with fairly cheap PCIe Gen 4 drives (sub-$100 for 1 TB), that meet the system's minimum requirements for an internal storage upgrade. It is hoped that other manufacturers have been invited to make Xbox expansion cards, not only Western Digital, so a more competitive market becomes a reality and MSRPs fall to more sensible levels.
Source:
The Verge
The Seagate range could have been a timed exclusive, and based on the now deleted Best Buy listing, Microsoft seems to have handed a license to WD. The 1 TB WD_BLACK C50 Expansion Card's pricing was a big talking point, due to it being substantially cheaper than the equivalent capacity Seagate model ($219.99) - a saving of forty dollars, which is an encouraging sign for gamers who have long complained that the Xbox proprietary expansion card offers bad value for money. Seagate's current crop of cards start at $139.99 (512 GB) and go up to $399.99 (2 TB).Sony famously decided not to utilize a proprietary storage solution for its PlayStation 5 home console, and owners are allowed to upgrade via an industry standard M.2 SSD expandable storage slot. It has been widely reported that the PS5 can be fitted with fairly cheap PCIe Gen 4 drives (sub-$100 for 1 TB), that meet the system's minimum requirements for an internal storage upgrade. It is hoped that other manufacturers have been invited to make Xbox expansion cards, not only Western Digital, so a more competitive market becomes a reality and MSRPs fall to more sensible levels.
25 Comments on WD Plans to Muscle in on Xbox Series X|S Storage Expansion Card Scene
Hopefully, this is a sign that maybe, just maybe, they FINALLY get it....... competition is G/O/O/D, for them, for us, for the ecosystem in general :D
On my Xboxes however? Yeah, basically they tell us to get bent with pricing the 1TB expansion card at $220. It was pricey even when it came out.
Yeah proofreader is failing
Also first sentence should likely be, undercutting a big rival without the its which if used should be it's but still maybe a should be removed no telling :/
eloutput.com/en/videojuegos/reportajes/xbox-series-x-tarjetas-cfexpress-compatible/
www.videogameschronicle.com/news/xbox-series-x-s-can-use-standard-ssds-in-the-expansion-card-slot-its-claimed/
Storage memory
Random access memory.
Still both types of memory.
And good grief 180 bucks is still a ripoff for 1TB. You can buy a faster 2TB SSD for the PC for that price.
It's ridiculous.