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Rumors suggest there will be a big difference in price between Sony PlayStation 6 (PS6) and Microsoft next Xbox. According to leaks from hardware experts and recent statements from Xbox leaders, the PS6 might cost around 600 dollars. This is important because it could be less than half the price of the future Microsoft console, which is rumored to cost 1,200 dollars or even more.
Usually, companies like Sony use a “walled garden” approach. This means they can sell the console cheaply because they make up the money by taking a 30% cut of every game sale. However, Microsoft is reportedly not using this closed system. Because they won’t make money from a cut of game sales, they have to charge customers the full, higher price for the advanced parts inside the new console.
The projected pricing for the next generation underscores the different philosophies of the two competitors:
| Console | Estimated Price Range (USD) | Key Strategic Driver |
|---|---|---|
| PlayStation 6 (PS6) | $500–$600 (Base/Standard) | Focus on affordability, efficiency, and maintaining market dominance through a closed ecosystem. |
| Next-Gen Xbox | $900–$1,200 (Premium Model) | Focus on a “very premium and high-end” PC-hybrid experience with an open ecosystem, requiring higher component costs. |
Concerns about Microsoft’s pricing strategy were recently heightened by the company’s decision to raise the price of its current Xbox Development Kit (XDK) by 33% to $2,000.

| Aspect | Sony (PS6) Strategy | Microsoft (Next-Gen Xbox) Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Target Market | Broad accessibility, mass-market users. | Niche premium users, gaming PC enthusiasts. |
| Performance | Balanced and efficient, expected to offer triple the PS5’s performance using AMD’s RDNA 5 architecture. | High-end, max specifications, incorporating a larger die size and advanced cooling systems. |
| Ecosystem | Closed “walled garden” focused on strong first-party exclusives. | Open to third-party PC storefronts (e.g., Steam, Epic), blurring the line between PC and console. |
| Potential Design | Rumored dockable design for handheld use and backward compatibility with PS4/PS5. | Described by Xbox President Sarah Bond as a “very premium” experience, potentially running a version of Windows. |
Sony’s plan is to stay on top by keeping the price low and offering many exclusive games. They are making their hardware as efficient as possible to keep the cost of parts down. Microsoft’s strategy is different. They are moving away from the traditional console. Their new machine is a “full portfolio” device that mixes a console with a PC. This makes it a very powerful, high-spec gaming machine, but it comes with a high price tag.
The big risk for Microsoft is losing gamers who don’t want to spend a lot of money. The risk for Sony is that they might have to sacrifice some performance if they try too hard to compete with Microsoft’s expensive, high-spec machine.