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Posted: 2017-06-12 15:26:16

Bye Project Scorpio, hello to the new Xbox One X.

The console, revealed by Microsoft at its E3 2017 conference on Sunday, is promising better graphics for players, whether or not they have a 4K television.

They do this by using a technique called "supersampling," where the computer creates images at a quality far higher than the TV can show, and then shrinks it down. This, Microsoft said, makes games look that much better. 

The new console is one of the most important product releases from the Xbox team in years. The Xbox One, while highly regarded by many, is estimated to have undersold the Sony PlayStation 4, its biggest competitor, nearly two-to-one. For Microsoft, that's not only knocks a sense of pride, but it also puts the company at a disadvantage when striking deals with game publishers and attempting to invest in new technology and groundbreaking new games.

Meanwhile, Sony's released a series of hit games, such as the Indiana Jones-inspired action adventure game Uncharted 4, that are only playable on its PlayStation 4. In addition to that console, which was first released in 2013 and currently sells for $250, the company has released an Xbox One X-like competitor called PlayStation 4 Pro last year, which sells for $400 apiece.

Sony's been pushing its competition against Microsoft in other ways too. While Microsoft struck a partnership with Facebook's Oculus virtual reality goggles makers, Sony released a device it had been developing for more than three years, called the PlayStation VR. At nearly 1 million units sold in less than six months on the market, the device has beaten Sony's internal expectations.

Sony isn't Microsoft's only competition. Nintendo's new Switch console, released in March, has also been given high marks by reviewers.

Super powerful tech

Some of the games Microsoft showed off during the event are enhanced by the One X's more powerful chips, which were mostly revealed earlier this year. They include a custom microprocessing brain, and a super powerful chip to power the slick visuals the company showed on stage.

In techy speak, that's a custom eight-core x86 chip clocked at 2.3 Ghz, integrated AMD graphics with 6 teraflops of performance, 12 GB of GDDR5 memory, 1TB of storage, a 4K/HDR Blu-ray drive along with support for 4K and HDR television sets. This all translates to sharper looking games that can play on next generation TVs and look even better on older ones too.

And in addition to being its most powerful video game console it's built, Microsoft says it's also the smallest the company's ever released (a crowd pleasing line, considering some of its previous devices have been rather bulky).

Microsoft has been building the hype for its Scorpio-codenamed device slowly over the past year, discussing the technology behind it in drips and drabs, but not sharing other details like what it looks like or its price until Sunday's press conference. 

The console is expected to be released worldwide on November 7 and cost $499 in the US. 

For more on E3 2017, check out complete coverage on CNET and GameSpot.  

First published June 11, 2:15 p.m. PT.
Update, June 12 at 8:25 a.m.: Adds more details about the device and background.

Virtual reality 101: CNET tells you everything you need to know about VR.

Batteries Not Included: The CNET team reminds us why tech is cool.

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