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Xbox One X enhanced games list, specs, VR and everything else we know about the renamed Project Scorpio

How powerful Microsoft's next system is, how it works with Xbox One, 4K gaming and more.

Following Digital Foundry's huge deep dive into Project Scorpio's tech specs back in April, it's finally here - the Xbox One X.

Here on this page we'll give details on Xbox One X specs, Xbox One X games, peripherals and backwards compatibility, and what is happening with VR support.

Microsoft is billing this as the most powerful console ever and, as Digital Foundry confirmed, it looks like it will be. With that in mind, let's dive in to what we know.

Cover image for YouTube videoXbox One X Review: The 4K Console You've Been Waiting For?

If you have picked up the new console, we can explain how to transfer games and system data from Xbox One to Xbox One X

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Xbox One X enhanced games list

Xbox One X is a mid-generation upgrade of the Xbox One, and so all games and peripherals that run on an Xbox One today will work on the new system, including controllers and Kinect, as well as initiatives such as Xbox 360 backwards compatibility and cross-buy with Windows 10 as well.

Like PS4 Pro, certain existing Xbox One games will see developers create optimised updates for Xbox One X - including first party titles Gears Of War 4, Forza Horizon 3, Minecraft, Halo Wars 2, Killer Instinct, as well as third party games such as Final Fantasy 15 and Rocket League, some of which will run in full 4K.

Here is the full list of currently supported Xbox One games with Xbox One X upgrades. Note not all patches are currently available, nor every game on this list yet released:

  • A Plague Tale: Innocence
  • A Way Out
  • Agents of Mayhem
  • Anthem
  • ARK: Survival Evolved (Game Preview)
  • Ashen
  • Ashes Cricket
  • Assassin's Creed Origins
  • Assault Android Cactus
  • Astroneer (Game Preview)
  • AWAY: Journey to the Unexpected
  • Battlerite
  • Below
  • Biomutant
  • Black Desert
  • Brawlout
  • Call of Duty WW2
  • Chess Ultra
  • Code Vein
  • Conan Exiles
  • Crackdown 3
  • Crossout
  • Danger Zone
  • Dark and Light
  • Darksiders Warmastered Edition
  • Darksiders 2 Deathinitive Edition
  • Darksiders 3
  • Dead Rising 4
  • Deep Rock Galactic
  • Diablo 3: Reaper of Souls - Ultimate Evil Edition
  • Dishonored 2
  • Dishonored: Death of the Outsider
  • Disneyland Adventures
Cover image for YouTube videoHalo Wars 2 on Xbox One X: Gamescom Demo vs PC/Xbox One Graphics Comparison + Analysis
  • Doom
  • Dovetail Games Euro Fishing
  • Dragon Ball Z Fighter Z
  • Dynasty Warriors 9
  • Elex
  • Elite: Dangerous
  • Everspace
  • F1 2017
  • Fable Fortune
  • Fallout 4
  • Far Cry 5
  • Farming Simulator 17
  • Fe
  • FIFA 18
  • Final Fantasy 15
  • Firewatch
  • For Honor
  • Fortnite
  • Forza Horizon 3
  • Forza Motorsport 7
  • Gears of War 4
  • Gravel
  • Greedfall
  • GRIDD: Retroenhanced
  • Halo 5: Guardians
  • Halo Master Chief Collection
  • Halo Wars 2
  • Hand of Fate 2
  • Hello Neighbor
  • Hitman
  • Homefront: The Revolution
  • Immortal: Unchained
  • Injustice 2
  • Jurassic Park Evolution
  • Killer Instinct
  • Killing Floor 2
  • Kingdom Come: Deliverance
  • L.A. Noire
  • Life is Strange: Before the Storm
  • Madden 18
  • Mafia 3
  • Mantis Burn Racing
  • Marvel Heroes Omega
  • Marvel vs Capcom Infinite
  • Metal Gear Survive
  • Metro: Exodus
  • Middle-earth: Shadow of War
  • Minecraft
  • Minion Masters
  • Monster Energy Supercross: The Official Videogame
  • Monster Hunter: World
Cover image for YouTube videoXbox One X Backwards Compatibility Tested: How Are Your Xbox One Games Improved?
  • Morphite
  • MX vs ATV All Out
  • NFL 18
  • NBA 2K18
  • Need for Speed Payback
  • Nine Parchments
  • Okami HD
  • Ooblets
  • Ori and the Will of the Wisp
  • Outcast - Second Contact
  • Outlast 2
  • Paladins
  • Path of Exile
  • Pixar Rush
  • PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds
  • Portal Knights
  • Pro Evolution Soccer 2018
  • Project Cars 2
  • Quantum Break
  • Raiders of the Broken Planet
  • Railway Empire
  • Real Farm
  • ReCore
  • Resident Evil 7 biohazard
  • RiME
  • Rise of the Tomb Raider
  • Riverbond
  • Roblox
  • Robocraft Infinity
  • Rocket League
  • Rugby 18
  • Sea of Thieves
  • Slime Rancher
  • Smite
  • Sonic Forces
  • Star Wars 2 Battlefront
  • State of Decay 2
Cover image for YouTube video[4K] Rise of the Tomb Raider Xbox One X - Native 4K, High Frame-Rate and Enriched 4K Demo Analysis!
  • Steep
  • Strange Brigade
  • Super Lucky's Tale
  • Superhot
  • Surviving Mars
  • Tennis World Tour
  • The Artful Escape
  • The Crew 2
  • The Darwin Project
  • The Elder Scrolls Online: Morrowind
  • The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim Special Edition
  • The Evil Within 2
  • The Last Night
  • The Long Dark
  • The Surge
  • The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt
  • theHunter: Call of The Wild
  • Thumper
  • Titanfall 2
  • Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Wildlands
  • Tom Clancy's The Division
  • Train Sim World
  • TT Isle of Man - Ride on the Edge
  • UFC 3
  • Unruly Heroes
  • War Thunder
  • Warframe
  • Warhammer: End Times - Vermintide
  • We Happy Few
  • Wolfenstein 2: The New Colossus
  • World of Tanks
  • WRC 7 FIA World Rally Championship
  • Zoo Tycoon

Interestingly, a number of Xbox 360 games have received Xbox One X upgrades. The currently supported Xbox 360 games with Xbox One X upgrades are:

  • Assassin's Creed
  • Fallout 3
  • Gears of War 3
  • Halo 3
  • Mirror's Edge
  • Skate 3
  • The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion
Cover image for YouTube video5 Ways Xbox One X/ Scorpio Improves Your Xbox One and 360 Games!

Elsewhere, currently existing Xbox One games "will look different" and may "run a little better" on Xbox One X, using Halo 5's dynamic scaling as an example - in fact, Digital Foundry have also run an analysis on just how much better your Xbox One and 360 games will be on Scorpio.

This is something we've already seen in the Xbox One S; while the system is not a mid-generation upgrade like Xbox One X or PS4 Pro, it offers an unadvertised slight performance boost of up to nine frames-per-second in certain games thanks to a GPU upgrade for 4K upscaling and HDR support.

In short, Xbox One X will likely offer a range of benefits to your classic Xbox gaming, from smoother performance to higher resolutions and better texture filtering - but to quote Rich Leadbetter himself:

"What this means in practice is that games that cannot fully sustain their target frame-rate on Xbox One stand a really good chance of doing so on Scorpio. But to be clear: what we won't see will be 30fps games suddenly running at 60fps. The game itself still sets its frame-rate target, and there are no functions for removing performance limits."

Forza Motorsport. 4K, 60fps, Xbox One quality settings with 4K assets. GPU utilisation is at 66.19 per cent, meaning there's a huge amount of overhead left over for improving visuals still further. Click on the thumbnail for a higher resolution image.

Will there be Xbox One X exclusive games?

Additionally, Microsoft has said there won't be any Xbox One X exclusives, despite initially contradictory messaging from Shannon Loftis shortly after the console's announcement that was swiftly corrected by Aaron Greenberg:

However, at gamescom 2016, Xbox marketing chief Aaron Greenberg confirmed there would be VR exclusive Xbox One X games, since they view VR as separate to traditional console games.

This was somewhat hinted at during the announcement video for Project Scorpio with Bethesda's Todd Howard saying: "We're moving Fallout 4 to VR and to have a console that can support that at the resolution and speed that we really want, I think it's going to be magical."

The interview also didn't rule out permanent forward compatibility, however, with Greenberg hinting at a move away from traditional console generations to an iterative hardware model with permanent backward compatibility - similar to what Apple does on iOS.

Xbox One X VR and 4K games support - what is the latest?

Upon the system's announcement, Microsoft has said Xbox One X's extra power will be particularly useful in two areas; delivering 4K gaming and "high fidelity" VR.

In Digital Foundry's opinion and spec analysis of Xbox One X, the suggestion is that, if the software - by which we mean games - are optimised well enough, "there is some evidence that Scorpio's true 4K performance could pose a challenge to the likes of Nvidia's GTX 1070 and AMD's Fury X-class hardware.

Over in the deepdive on Scorpio tech, Digital Foundry detailed what they were shown of a special Forza Motorsport demo running in native 4K at 60fps - with power to spare. "Clearly this is just one game, but the point is that Scorpio doesn't just scale Xbox One engines to 4K. For the Forza engine at least, there's overhead, and plenty of it."

Cover image for YouTube videoForza Motorsport 7 Reveal Trailer From E3 2017 - 4K Gameplay On Xbox One X

This was later confirmed with the announcement of Forza Motorsport 7 at E3, which will run at a native 4K at 60FPS.

At E3 2017 we've had Digital Foundry deep dives into other games, such as BioWare's Anthem and Assassin's Creed Origins on the system. Both aren't 'true' 4K, employing checkerboard rendering and / or dynamic resolution, but still offer some very impressive results.

Cover image for YouTube video[4K] Assassin's Creed Origins: Xbox One X Tech First Look!

However, a larger question from the event was the lack of code running on Xbox One X hardware, with several titles shown on PC instead - making it too early to make broad assessments of the jump between the PS4 Pro or even the standard Xbox One.

To quote Digital Foundry: "We'd like to stress that everything we've heard from developers about Xbox One X behind the scenes has been positive, but in the wake of the big hardware reveal - which set the bar so high - E3 was supposed to be about the games, and we were hopeful of comprehensive validation of the bold claims made for what is clearly a remarkable piece of console engineering."

Cover image for YouTube videoDF Videocast #10: Xbox One X - Has Microsoft Delivered?

As for 4K media, in Rich's words "Microsoft is confident in the quality of the scaler built into Scorpio's display processor", and is enhanced over the Xbox One S to "handle the bandwidth and quality requirements of 4K". That, of course, includes supporting Ultra HD Blu-ray discs and likely 4K streaming apps such as Netflix and Amazon Instant Video. (If you're interested in investing in a 4K TV ahead of Xbox One X, here are some of the best television screens for HDR gaming.)

As for VR support, that's "no problem" with the proposed specs on offer, according to Digital Foundry, as "a 6TF Radeon GPU [a rough equivalent to Scorpio's power] comfortably outperforms the baseline R9 290 and GTX 970 suggested for VR ready PCs".

The other question is how VR will work on Xbox One X. Unlike Sony, Microsoft doesn't have a VR headset of its own, so will land on third parties to help. The obvious bet is with Oculus, with whom they currently have a partnership in providing Xbox One controllers with every device sold, as well as optimising the hardware to work more effectively with Windows, but neither Microsoft or Oculus has suggested anything along these lines just yet.

Even at the system's full unveiling at E3 2017, VR wasn't mentioned. Only a post-conference interview with Giant Bomb (as reported by Gamer Network partner Road to VR) saw Xbox boss Phil Spencer address the topic, saying that though the system is more than capable, but it's a case of how the box fits into people's homes: "The power of the box is fine in terms of having a VR or MR experience run on it, it's really that family room environment that we're struggling a little bit with."

Xbox One X specs: how powerful is the new Xbox and how much better will games look?

Unlike the Xbox One S - which is more along the lines of a traditional slim redesign - Xbox One X is a mid-generation upgrade to the Xbox One.

At E3 we had a first glimpse at the box itself, which is touted as the smallest Xbox ever - smaller even than last year's Xbox One S slimline revision.

The hard specs are as follows, with comparisons to the PS4 Pro and original Xbox One, over in our exclusive Digital Foundry Project Scorpio reveal:

  • Eight custom CPU cores clocked at 2.3GHz
  • 326GB/s of memory bandwidth
  • 1172MHz GPU - with 40 customised compute units
  • 12GB GDDR5 memory
  • 1TB HDD
  • 4K UHD Blu-ray disc player
  • 4K gaming support
  • VR support

This is a machine with far more graphical prowess that the existing Xbox One, and how developers will take advantage of that 6TF of GPU power is up to them. (Digital Foundry has you covered if you're interested in knowing what a teraflop actually is, by the way.)

Digital Foundry: 'Here are Scorpio's major components and how they stack into the final, compact system'

Back during E3 2016, Xbox head Phil Spencer said users will only notice a difference with games running on Xbox One X if they had a 4K television ("Scorpio is designed as a 4K console, and if you don't have a 4K TV, the benefit we've designed for, you're not going to see", he told Eurogamer in an interview during E3) but that's changed - Spencer later clarified that "some developers will take advantage of that 6 teraflops in different ways", meaning they won't have to use the extra processing power to necessarily hit 4K, and can channel it towards a better looking 1080p experience instead - whether that's through super sampling or otherwise.

So while Sony's mid-generation upgrade PS4 Pro requires developers to support a 1080p resolution with its mandatory Pro mode from October, Xbox One X will be a little looser in how developers used the more advanced specs. This could be a good thing, as our own Richard Leadbetter questions whether chasing a higher pixel-count is a better use of mid-generation consoles than higher frame-rates or richer gameplay experiences.

Cover image for YouTube videoXbox One X/ Project Scorpio Exclusive: Final Specs Revealed!

Xbox One X vs PS4 Pro, existing PS4, Xbox One consoles

Digital Foundry originally created a suggested spec analysis on possible parts Xbox One X could be using, back before their exclusive reveal.

Now, we know the complete details of what's in the box. To summarise, we can expect a much faster GPU than the PS4 Pro (4.2TF compared to Xbox One X's 6TF - easily the system's biggest selling point), 12GB of GDDR5 RAM (9GB of which is for games, 3GB for a 4k dashboard) and eight custom GPU cores at a whopping 1172MHz.

PS4 PS4 Pro Xbox One Xbox One X
CPU Eight Jaguar cores clocked at 1.6GHz Eight Jaguar cores clocked at 2.1GHz Eight Jaguar cores clocked at 1.75GHz Eight custom x86 cores clocked at 2.3GHz
GPU 18 Radeon GCN compute units at 800MHz 36 improved GCN compute units at 911MHz 12 GCN compute units at 853MHz 40 customised compute units at 1172MHz
Memory 8GB GDDR5 at 176GB/s 8GB GDDR5 at 218GB/s 8GB DDR3 at 68GB/s and 32MB ESRAM at max 218GB/s 12GB GDDR5 at 326GB/s

This means that while Xbox One has lagged behind PS4 performance, Xbox One X is set to offer a sizable leap over both the PS4 and PS4 Pro, with much better graphical and memory capabilities, and support for native 4K gaming.

To quote Digital Foundry in the Xbox Project Scorpio spec analysis: "It's a remarkable turnabout. A good portion of PlayStation 4's success has been down to its spec advantage over Xbox One, combined with a focus on the hardcore player. Sony's technological advantage will be gone with the next wave of hardware."

Cover image for YouTube videoIs Project Scorpio better than the PS4 Pro?

Xbox One X price and release date

At E3 2017, Microsoft confirmed a worldwide November 7 release date for Xbox One X, as well as pricing - £449, $499 USD, €499 Euros, $599 CA and $649 AU.

This shouldn't come as a huge surprise - Digital Foundry predicted a $100 difference between that and the PS4 Pro, which retailed for £350 for a 1TB model.

Here is where you can pre-order Xbox One X in the UK:

And in the US:

To quote Rich Leadbetter's thoughts on Scorpio's hardware one last time: "if I had to guess - and I'll stress that this isn't based on anything I might have heard on my visit - Xbox One X is going to cost in the region of $499."

Regardless of the price - which pits it has the most expensive home console right now - Microsoft is selling the system at a loss, with Phil Spencer saying "the money-making part is in selling games".

Additional reporting by Chris Tapsell.