- Xbox expects SSD and RAM costs to rise up to 5x by 2027.
- The “Xbox Reboot” project may require major budget cuts.
- To address these financial challenges and fund the new direction, the company is restructuring and conducting major layoffs.
Microsoft isn’t giving up on the Xbox Series X and Series S despite failing to achieve significant success and selling few games. Struggling to match its competitors, the company has already begun to take measures with its gaming strategy.
But at the hardware level, not everything is under their control. According to Xbox’s CEO, rising memory and storage costs will make the storage cost for the next Project Helix five times higher than it would have been two years ago. Project Helix is set to launch in 2027.
Xbox needs Project Helix to succeed to avoid the Series X/S tragedy, but that will be challenging. It’s not just about the curiosity that purchasing a hybrid PC/console from a brand like Xbox, which has already lost much of its reputation, may generate in the gaming world, but they also have to consider the prices.
We’re talking about a hybrid console with high-end PC technology, and while we don’t know how much storage it will have, Xbox CEO Asha Sharma predicts that storage costs would be five times higher by Christmas 2027 than they were in Christmas 2025.
For example, a 1TB SSD that used to cost $60 now costs $300. The same is happening with RAM, which has undergone a comparable price growth and will likely cost five times as much, if not more, by 2027.
The CEO of Xbox addressed all of these challenging concerns in her “Xbox Reboot” project, which will need budget adjustments and cuts. In fact, we recently covered Xbox’s plans for significant layoffs to decrease costs.
According to Asha, “they can’t manufacture as many consoles as players want to buy,” so they must adapt their business model by forging “partnerships with other companies for hardware.”
This means that OEMs will release their own Project Helix consoles. It’s important to note that it won’t be a closed-environment console, but rather a Windows PC (with Xbox games and environment), which means hardware and software compatibility will be possible.
This is somewhat similar to Valve’s Steam Machine concept, in which ASUS, MSI, and other companies may introduce their own consoles based on the same platform but with different aesthetics and features. Furthermore, we should keep in mind that the Xbox Helix cannot be priced too high or else, no one will buy it, so they may have to sell it for $1,000 at a loss.
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[Editor-in-Chief]
Sajjad Hussain is the Founder and Editor-in-Chief of Tech4Gamers.com. Apart from the Tech and Gaming scene, Sajjad is a Seasonal banker who has delivered multi-million dollar projects as an IT Project Manager and works as a freelancer to provide professional services to corporate giants and emerging startups in the IT space.
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Sajjad is a passionate and knowledgeable individual with many skills and experience in the tech industry and the gaming community. He is committed to providing honest, in-depth product reviews and analysis and building and maintaining a strong gaming community.




