Myth: >b-b-b-but it's a proprietary format SSD! Fact: The SeX SSD is a PCIe 4.0 CFexpress memory card. CFexpress is used in high-end cinema cameras.
Myth: >b-b-b-but there's no market competition because only seagate will make them! Fact: Other manufactures will also be making CFexpress memory cards compatible with Xbox Series X.
Fact: Other devices used the memory cards that the PSP used and they were still way too expensive
Cameron Cook
the console wars get pettier and pettier.
Isaiah Myers
Wrong. It is proprietary garbage with jacked up prices and you will never be able to buy and use whatever one you want with it, unlike with PS5. Sony won.
Julian Cruz
Is that what it looks like when you finally become a Wizard?
Cooper Sanchez
yes, join the xbros and gather up your gamerscore. Once you have enough gamerscore you will finally get to be a XChad Wizard.
Leo Reed
>CFexpress If its a cfexpress card its actually really really cheap. I would have prefered a small nvme tho since its much cheaper.
>SanDisk currently sells a 256 GB CFexpress card for $399.99 and a 512 GB card for $599.99. Those cards offer read and write speeds of 1.7 GB/s and 1.4 GB/s, respectively
Gabriel Russell
all those devices were sony exclusive
Ayden Bell
you mean m.2 right? because it still is a NVME drive
Benjamin King
Just like the vita memory cards, huh?
Isaac Watson
Take ur meds schizzo
Jason Hernandez
all of them Sony products, mainly high-end cameras
Jeremiah Bell
Anyone else mirrin' that thick and luscious beard?
>actually defending $300 1500MB/s sluggish proprietary memory cards vs being able to use any (average $170) PCIe 4.0 NVMe rated at 5000MB/s read / write literally unbelievable
Nolan Flores
it's already been established that it's not proprietary, read the thread
Jayden Lewis
He looks like Orthodox priest
Isaiah Lee
...ok? PS5 still uses the most standard consumer-friendly standard. The main point that XseX storage will always be more expensive still stands true.
If Vita SD's had more manufacturers, or were compatible/used the same form factor as other professional appliances, they would nonetheless still be more expensive than the completely standard microSD cards used on 3DS, phones, PC's, etc etc.
fact: its more expensive yet somehow slower than the ps5 lol
Henry Morales
fact: it won't make much of a difference
Jaxon Gomez
Is that Vita's formfactor? I never used one. If it is then my point stands even stronger. If that's the case then despite Vita''s storage not being wholy proprietary to the console, it still cost more than a microSD.
So it doesn't matter if XseX's SSDs are also used here and there. PS5's standard M2 formfactor still outsells Xsex's formfactor 50 to 1, at least. It''s what every PC user uses, and has more options from more manufacturers (all of them).
Isaiah White
What is this thing hanging out of his chin?
Jayden Green
>read the filename
Levi Johnson
god I wish I could grow a beard that long but mine is really soft
Jaxson Perez
there's an adapter microsd for both ps vita and psp memory card . not sure is possible to have that kind of stuff with xbox maybe something like this will exist in future.
>The SeX SSD is a PCIe 4.0 CFexpress memory card. Proofs? If this is electrically compatible with an NVMe drive then I don't know what anyone's problem is. Just get a passive adapter.
Robert Wright
Isit the SSD in the memory card just an NVMe 2230 SSD with a metal shroud for cooling? I was thinking if it is it won't be too long before some random company in china makes a customizable shroud which let's you insert any NVMe 2230 into it which can be placed inside the xbox.
Zachary Cook
apparently it's not M.2 but CFExpress it is NVME though, not sure why everyone thinks it's SATA
Elijah Thomas
I just typed it into google and what's funny is the xbox memory cards were the first thing in the recommendations lol.
If its CFExpress MS are taking massive losses on these things since they're rare and barely anything used them except like cameras iirc and those go for like 4x as much for slower speeds. I think it's just an NVMe 2230 in a shroud. We'll know soon enough when someone breaks it open anyway.