This is the console question everyone asks. And the honest answer is: it depends on which games you want to play.
The PS5 Pro is the more powerful machine. It has the better exclusive library. But it costs $200 more than the Xbox Series X — and Xbox Game Pass is genuinely one of the best deals in gaming right now.
So the decision is not about which console is technically superior. It is about what matters to you. Here is everything you need to make that call.
PS5 Pro vs Xbox Series X — Full Comparison
| Feature | PS5 Pro | Xbox Series X |
|---|---|---|
| Price | $699 (disc-less) | $499 (disc drive included) |
| GPU Performance | ~33% faster than base PS5 | Standard Series X GPU |
| RAM | 16GB GDDR6 | 16GB GDDR6 |
| Storage | 2TB NVMe SSD | 1TB NVMe SSD |
| Disc Drive | Optional add-on ($79) | Built-in |
| Upscaling | PSSR (AI-based) | Xbox upscaling |
| Exclusive Games | God of War, Spider-Man, Horizon, TLOU | Halo, Forza, Starfield, Avowed |
| Game Subscription | PS Plus Extra ($17.99/mo) | Game Pass Ultimate ($14.99/mo) |
| Backwards Compatibility | PS4 games only | Xbox One, 360, original Xbox |
| PC Cross-Play | Limited (some PC ports) | Strong (Play Anywhere titles) |
| Controller | DualSense 2 (haptics + adaptive triggers) | Xbox Controller (Elite Series 3 optional) |
How We Put This Together
This comparison comes from six months of active use on both consoles — 30+ games played across both platforms through 2025 and 2026. Performance data is sourced from Digital Foundry and Eurogamer technical analysis. Game library data was cross-referenced against Metacritic scores above 80. All pricing reflects official MSRP as of May 2026.
Performance — PS5 Pro Wins
The PS5 Pro has a meaningfully faster GPU than the Xbox Series X. Full stop.
Sony’s PlayStation Spectral Super Resolution (PSSR) — their AI upscaling answer to DLSS — lets PS5 Pro titles run at native or high-quality 4K at higher frame rates than the base PS5 was managing. Games like Gran Turismo 7 hit native 4K/60fps on PS5 Pro where the base PS5 was running checkerboard 4K. The frame pacing is cleaner, the visual quality is higher, and Sony’s first-party studios are building specifically for the Pro hardware.
That is where the PS5 Pro feels different from the Xbox Series X. In cross-platform multiplayer games like Call of Duty, the gap is small — nearly identical performance on both consoles. But in Sony’s own single-player titles, the PS5 Pro’s GPU advantage produces a noticeably better visual experience. If you care about the highest-fidelity console gaming in 2026, the PS5 Pro delivers it.
Exclusive Games — PS5 Pro Wins (by a clear margin)
| PS5 Pro Exclusives | Metacritic | Xbox Series X Exclusives | Metacritic |
|---|---|---|---|
| God of War: Ragnarök | 94 | Forza Horizon 5 | 92 |
| Spider-Man 2 | 90 | Hi-Fi Rush | 87 |
| Horizon Forbidden West | 88 | Halo Infinite | 87 |
| Ghost of Tsushima | 83 | Starfield | 83 |
| Stellar Blade | 82 | Avowed | 80 |
| Gran Turismo 7 | 87 | Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024 | — |
PlayStation’s exclusive library is one of the strongest in gaming history. God of War: Ragnarök, Spider-Man 2, Horizon Forbidden West, The Last of Us series — these are the games people buy PlayStation specifically to play. They are not on Xbox. They are not on PC at launch (some arrive years later). If you want to play them, you need a PS5 Pro.
That is where the PS5 Pro’s value case is clearest. Xbox has excellent exclusives too — Forza Horizon 5 is phenomenal, Hi-Fi Rush is one of the best games of the generation. But Xbox’s strategy is to release everything on Game Pass and PC simultaneously. Which is great for value. But it means fewer Xbox-only must-haves that force the hardware purchase.
If there are three or more PlayStation exclusives you genuinely want to play, the PS5 Pro pays for itself in game library alone.
Game Pass vs PS Plus — Xbox Wins
| Xbox Game Pass Ultimate ($14.99/mo) | PS Plus Extra ($17.99/mo) | |
|---|---|---|
| Day-one first-party titles | Yes — all Microsoft games included | No — exclusives not included at launch |
| Library size | 300+ games | 400+ games |
| PC access | Yes (PC Game Pass included) | No |
| Cloud gaming | Yes (Xbox Cloud Gaming) | Limited (PS Plus Premium) |
| EA Play included | Yes | No |
| Monthly cost | $14.99 | $17.99 |
Xbox Game Pass Ultimate is one of the best deals in gaming. Every Microsoft first-party game releases on Game Pass the same day it launches at retail — Starfield, Avowed, Forza, Halo, all of it. You pay $14.99/month and you play every Xbox exclusive without buying a single game. EA Play is included. PC Game Pass is included. Cloud gaming is included.
That is where Game Pass feels different from PS Plus. PS Plus Extra gives you a big library of older games — but PlayStation exclusives typically do not appear in the catalogue at launch. If you want to play Spider-Man 2 on day one, you are buying it at full price regardless of your PS Plus tier.
If you buy three full-price games per year, Game Pass at $14.99/month pays for itself. The math strongly favours Xbox for gamers who play a lot of different titles.
Controller — PS5 Pro Wins
The DualSense 2 is genuinely different from every other controller on the market.
Adaptive triggers provide programmable resistance that changes based on what is happening in the game — a bowstring pulls taut, a gun recoils against your finger, a car tyre slips under braking. Haptic feedback replaces traditional rumble motors with precise, localised sensations. Rain feels different from gravel. Walking feels different from running on metal.
That is where the DualSense 2 feels different from the Xbox controller. The Xbox controller is excellent — comfortable, reliable, familiar. But it does not have adaptive triggers or advanced haptics. Games built for DualSense use these features extensively. Astro’s Playroom is the showcase, but most Sony first-party games implement them meaningfully. Once you feel the difference, going back to standard rumble feels like a step backwards.
Value — Xbox Series X Wins
The numbers are straightforward.
PS5 Pro at $699 with no disc drive. Add the optional disc drive at $79 and you are at $778 for a complete setup. Xbox Series X comes in at $499 with a disc drive already built in. That is a $279 difference before you buy a single game or subscription.
And over time, the gap widens. Game Pass Ultimate at $14.99/month vs. PS Plus Extra at $17.99/month — over a year, that is another $36 saved on Xbox. Xbox’s backwards compatibility library (Xbox One, Xbox 360, original Xbox) means your existing game collection carries over immediately. PS5 Pro only supports PS4 backwards compatibility.
If budget matters — and for most people it does — the Xbox Series X delivers an excellent gaming experience at $200 less than the PS5 Pro, with a subscription service that genuinely saves you money.
Which Console Should You Buy?
| Buy the PS5 Pro ($699) if… | Buy the Xbox Series X ($499) if… |
|---|---|
| You want Sony exclusives (God of War, Spider-Man, Horizon) | You want the best gaming subscription (Game Pass) |
| You want the highest visual fidelity from a console | You own a gaming PC and want Play Anywhere titles |
| The DualSense 2 haptic experience matters to you | You want the best backwards compatibility library |
| You already own PS4 games you want to play | The $200 price difference matters to your budget |
Both are excellent consoles. The choice really comes down to one question: which exclusive games do you want to play?
If the answer is God of War, Spider-Man, Horizon, and The Last of Us — buy the PS5 Pro. Those games are only on PlayStation, they are among the best games made this generation, and the PS5 Pro hardware runs them at their best.
But if the answer is Forza, Halo, Starfield, and Avowed — or if you just want a great gaming experience with maximum value and access to the best subscription service in gaming — the Xbox Series X at $499 is the smarter buy. And the $200 you save goes a long way.