The Xbox One S, a video game console made by Microsoft and released in 2016. The "S" is a slimmer model of the previous One that was first released in 2013. Besides being smaller, the S has new features like HDR and 4K video from streaming and UHD Blu-Ray sources. Wikipedia Commons
The Xbox was first released in 2001. The Xbox was Microsoft's first foray into the gaming console market and is shown here with the Duke controller, the original pack-in controller, which was later replaced by a smaller 'S' controller. The console is notable for having a built-in hard drive, breakaway controller dongles and an Ethernet port to support Microsoft's online gaming service, Xbox Live. Wikipedia Commons
An original Xbox debugging console, intended for developers. Wikipedia Commons
The Xbox 360 was released by Microsoft in 2005. This is the "Pro" model from the launch line-up, which featured a 20GB hard drive, wireless controller and a silver DVD bezel. The production date of this unit is 2005-11-05, making it a very early unit. Wikipedia Commons
An Xbox 360 S shown with included controller. This is a matte-finish 4GB version. Wikipedia Commons
The Xbox One console, shown with the controller and the Kinect. Released in 2013 in North America and select markets, it is the third video game console made by Microsoft and succeeds the Xbox 360. Wikipedia Commons
The Xbox 360 E, a seventh generation gaming console from Microsoft. The E model is the third design in the Xbox 360 series, coming after the "Slim" and the original design. It was revealed during E3 in June 2013, shortly after the Xbox One announcement. Wikipedia Commons
The Xbox One S, a video game console made by Microsoft and released in 2016. The "S" is a slimmer model of the previous One that was first released in 2013. Besides being smaller, the S has new features like HDR and 4K video from streaming and UHD Blu-Ray sources. Wikipedia Commons
The Xbox was first released in 2001. The Xbox was Microsoft's first foray into the gaming console market and is shown here with the Duke controller, the original pack-in controller, which was later replaced by a smaller 'S' controller. The console is notable for having a built-in hard drive, breakaway controller dongles and an Ethernet port to support Microsoft's online gaming service, Xbox Live. Wikipedia Commons
An original Xbox debugging console, intended for developers. Wikipedia Commons
The Xbox 360 was released by Microsoft in 2005. This is the "Pro" model from the launch line-up, which featured a 20GB hard drive, wireless controller and a silver DVD bezel. The production date of this unit is 2005-11-05, making it a very early unit. Wikipedia Commons
An Xbox 360 S shown with included controller. This is a matte-finish 4GB version. Wikipedia Commons
The Xbox One console, shown with the controller and the Kinect. Released in 2013 in North America and select markets, it is the third video game console made by Microsoft and succeeds the Xbox 360. Wikipedia Commons
The Xbox 360 E, a seventh generation gaming console from Microsoft. The E model is the third design in the Xbox 360 series, coming after the "Slim" and the original design. It was revealed during E3 in June 2013, shortly after the Xbox One announcement. Wikipedia Commons
The Xbox One S, a video game console made by Microsoft and released in 2016. The "S" is a slimmer model of the previous One that was first released in 2013. Besides being smaller, the S has new features like HDR and 4K video from streaming and UHD Blu-Ray sources. Wikipedia Commons
Everything we know about the new Xbox: From its name to its star games
The Xbox has been playing catch-up to PlayStation since 2013. But can it win over gamers with its 2020 release?