Xbox One vs Nintendo Switch: Price

You should expect to pay around £280 whether you buy the console now or over the next few months, though we have seen an influx of bundles as time has gone on. 

As for the Xbox One S, things are slightly more complicated thanks to the different versions of the console available. You can buy it on its own for  £189.99 for the 1TB model, though you’ll probably want to grab a bundle with a game, which usually gets you a better deal. You can grab the 1TB Xbox One S with Minecraft bundled in for just £199.99.

Ultimately, the Xbox One S is definitely cheaper than the Switch, and you could buy it with a handful of games included for less than the price of the Switch alone. 

Xbox One vs Nintendo Switch: Specs and features

Here’s where the comparison between the Switch and the Xbox One gets a bit trickier, because they’re very different consoles. In terms of raw power, the Xbox One S definitely comes out on top. Its 1.75GHz 8-core AMD CPU with integrated graphics is comfortably faster than the Switch’s Nvidia Tegra chip, and it has 8GB of RAM to the Switch’s (unconfirmed) 4GB. The Xbox wins on storage too: it comes with either 500GB or 1TB, compared to just 32GB (expandable by Micro SD card) in the Switch. That’s hardly a fair comparison though, because for what the Switch lacks in horsepower, it more than makes up for in added features. That’s because while the Xbox One S is a pretty traditional home console, the Switch is more of a hybrid, letting you play games on the big screen or take them on the go, while also packing some novel features into its controllers. The Switch itself is actually essentially a touchscreen tablet with controllers that slot into the sides, and you can use it in a few ways. You can play with the controllers attached, so that it looks a bit like a Wii U gamepad, you can play with the controllers separated from the screen on the go (with a handy kickstand to prop the main tablet up), or you can dock the tablet and output it to your TV for a more traditional home console set-up.

The Switch controllers pack even more features. The Joy-Con can be used separately, a bit like smaller Wii remotes, or can be attached to an included grip to form a more traditional controller shape. They each include HD rumble, which allows for more detailed vibration feedback, and also include gyroscopes and an IR motion camera in the right one, which allows the controller to detect objects in front of it, including how far away they are. The Xbox One S and the Switch offer potentially very different gaming experiences. The Xbox is a pretty standard games console (which is no bad thing!), but the Switch offers not only the ability to play games on the go, but also some new potential gameplay mechanics thanks to the HD rumble and other Joy-Con innovations – at the cost of some horsepower and storage.

Xbox One vs Nintendo Switch: Accessories

It’s also worth bearing in mind both consoles’ accessories, as most owners will look to pick up a few. If you get the Xbox One, you’re probably mostly looking at additional controllers, which start at £42.99 and range up to the likes of the £109.99 Elite. You might also be interested in grabbing a headset for online chat, or more specialised controllers like a driving wheel or arcade stick, but that’s about it.

With the Switch, you’re likely looking at spending more for accessories. For starters, if you want to use it as a portable device, you’ll almost certainly want a carry case to protect it – Nintendo’s official one is £19.99. If you want to do any serious couch gaming, you’ll likely want the Pro controller for £59.85, and if you want to have a few friends round for multiplayer you’ll want extra Joy-Con – a pair will cost you £69.99. Then there’s a Micro SD card for storage – this SanDisk 128GB card will cost you another £40.99. The steep accessory pricing means they’re a serious hidden cost for most owners, and you should factor them in when deciding which console to pick up.

Xbox One vs Nintendo Switch: Games

At the end of the day, most of us buy a games console for one thing only: playing games. So how do the Xbox One and the Switch compare? With the Xbox One, you’re getting access to an array of major titles released over the last few years, and plenty more on the way. Exclusives include the likes of Halo 5, Gears of War 4, and Forza 7, along with all the major multi-platform games like FIFA 18, Call of Duty WW2, and Assassin’s Creed Origins. While Microsoft’s lineup of upcoming exclusives is slightly slim, you can be confident that the Xbox One S will continue to get a steady stream of big multi-platform games to play. With the Switch, you’re more reliant on Nintendo’s first-party games – while some third-party games are on the way, these are mostly indies, old (such as a Skyrim port) or uncertain. As for Nintendo’s own output, most of the games look great – there just aren’t all that many of them yet. At launch, The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild is the flagship title, joined by mini-game collection 1-2-Switch. Later, we were treated to the likes of Mario Kart 8 from the Wii U, ink shooter Splatoon 2, Pokemon: Let’s Go, Super Smash Bros Ultimate and platformer Super Mario Odyssey. If you’re a huge Nintendo fan, those titles alone might be enough to entice you into buying the Switch – but if not, you might want to wait until more games are announced to make sure you’ll be getting your money’s worth.

Verdict

The Xbox One and the Nintendo Switch are both very different devices in many respects, so they’re hard to easily compare. The Xbox is slightly cheaper, and offers most of the standard big-budget videogames on some pretty powerful hardware, while the Switch gives some handy portable power, and the only surefire way to play Nintendo’s latest and greatest. If you already own a PS4, you might be better off grabbing the Switch for variety, but if you don’t own any console yet, the Xbox might be a safer start. Tech Advisor’s Deputy Editor, Dom covers everything that runs on electricity, from phones and laptops to wearables, audio, gaming, smart home, and streaming - plus he’s a regular fixture on the Tech Advisor YouTube channel.

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