Xbox Series S Carbon Black lead cnnu

The $300 Xbox Series S is an excellent entry point into current-gen gaming, but its relatively measly 512GB of storage fills up pretty fast as games get bigger and bigger. Microsoft knows this, which is why it just launched a new 1TB version of the console — and coated it in black just for good measure.

The $350 Xbox Series S Carbon Black features the same compact design that first launched back in 2020, this time ditching the white for a more subdued look and serving up nearly twice the storage space. It’s available for preorder right now and hits stores on Sept. 1.

The Xbox Series S 1TB Carbon Black edition takes Microsoft's tiny, affordable next-gen console and gives it a sleek black coat of paint — and nearly twice the storage.

For the uninitiated, the Xbox Series S is Microsoft’s entry-level console, offering many of the same key benefits as the $500 Xbox Series X at a much lower price. That includes a speedy SSD for nearly instant loading times, a Quick Resume feature for hopping between multiple games in a snap and enough internal power to run games at up to a smooth 120 frames per second. We’ve long considered it to be one of the best values in console gaming, and while you’ll have to live without a disc drive for physical games and the more immersive 4K capabilities of the Series X, it’s a fantastic jumping-on point for anyone who wants to play the latest blockbusters.

Offering almost twice the storage for just $50 more than the launch model, the new Carbon Black Series S makes this great value even better — especially when you consider how expensive external storage is. Until recently, your only option for expanding your Xbox Series S or X’s storage was to pick up one of Seagate’s proprietary expansion cards, which start at $90 for an extra 512GB of storage and go all the way up to $280 for 2TB of extra space. Storage maker WD_Black recently entered the market with its own cards that are $80 for 500GB and $150 for 1TB, which are attainable but not exactly cheap.

Purchased separately at full retail, a starting Series S and a 500GB expansion card would run you a total of at least $380 — that makes the Carbon Black model a $30 value that leaves you some cash to put toward more games or a Game Pass subscription.

“We’ve heard the feedback that the 500GB can be a limit for some people, and yes, we’ve heard the feedback on the expansion cards and we’re working on that,” said Xbox chief Phil Spencer at a roundtable the company hosted after its big Xbox Games Showcase in Los Angeles. “But we also wanted to make a console that had 1TB inside. We continue to take feedback on our console, we continue to build out the roadmap of where [the] console is today, where it’ll be tomorrow and, frankly, where it’ll be in the future for us.”

That being said, the white 512GB Xbox Series S is almost always on sale these days — it’s currently $250 on Amazon — and is still the better choice for folks looking to spend as little as possible. Throw in an $80 WD_Black card, and you can theoretically get a 1TB Series S for less than the price of the Carbon Black unit if you catch the white model at a discount.

Xbox Series S Carbon Black hands on cnnu 1

I got to briefly see the new Carbon Black model up close, and it’s very much a black Xbox Series S that sports the same matte coating as the Xbox Series X. It seems a lot more susceptible to fingerprints than the white model, and part of me is worried that it looks too similar to its higher-end sibling — something that could potentially lead to an uninformed parent buying the wrong box. I’m still partial to the two-tone look of my white Series S, but the Carbon Black version seems like a perfectly slick little black box that’ll sit unassumingly in your entertainment center (and remains wonderfully tiny should you need to throw it in a backpack).

There’s little reason to pick this model up if you already own a current-gen Xbox, but if you’re getting your first Xbox console, you’re finally upgrading from your old Xbox One or you just want a second system to stick in your kids’ room, the Carbon Black edition is definitely the best value in the lineup right now.

Starfield Xbox Wireless Headset and Xbox Wireless Controller

In addition to a new Xbox Series S, Microsoft also took the wraps off of special Starfield-themed versions of the Xbox Wireless Controller (our favorite PC gamepad) and Xbox Wireless Headset. Both are pricier than their non-branded counterparts at $80 and $125, respectively, but they also sport some really neat features and design elements — for example, the controller has transparent triggers, textured grips and handy text around the buttons that let you see the game’s starship controls at a quick glance. The hugely anticipated Starfield finally hits Xbox consoles and PC on Sept. 6, so now’s not a bad time to gear up. And if you’re getting an Xbox just for this game — which will come in at a whopping 125GB — you should probably get one with lots of storage.