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Microsoft launched two flavors of its Xbox Series console back in November of 2020 - a more expensive and powerful "X" model appealing to hardcore enthusiasts arrived alongside an entry-level/budget friendly "S" system that featured lesser hardware specifications. The current generation Xbox consoles share the same custom AMD 8-core Zen 2 processor, albeit with different clock configurations, but the key divergence lies in Microsoft's choice of graphical hardware. The Series X packs an AMD "Scarlett" graphics processor with access to 16 GB of VRAM, while the Series S makes do with only 8 GB of high speed video memory with its "Lockhart" GPU.
Games studios have historically struggled to optimize their projects for the step down Xbox model - with software engineers complaining about memory allocation issues thanks to a smaller pool of VRAM - the Series S CPU and GPU have to fight over a total of 10 GB GDDR6 system memory. Microsoft listened to this feedback and made necessary changes last year - an updated SDK was released and a video briefing explained: "Hundreds of additional megabytes of memory are now available to Xbox Series S developers...This gives developers more control over memory, which can improve graphics performance in memory-constrained conditions."
End users are now joining in and complaining about Xbox Series S VRAM limitations - news outlets this week have been alerted to feedback appearing on Reddit. A /Gaming subreddit member called jokekiller94 has posted an entry titled "Apparently the Series S can run out of VRAM…" along with a photograph that captures the unfortunate incident on their system of choice. The Xbox Error message states: "Out of video memory trying to allocate a rendering resource. Make sure your video card has the minimum required memory, try lowering the resolution and/or closing other applications that are running. Exiting..." this warning sits over a frozen Borderlands 3 session. A commenter, bacon_sammer, confirms that they are also experiencing multiple crashes with same game and platform. It is slightly amusing that the example Series S recommends that its user adjust video card's settings, but this is not a problem exclusive to the home console segment. PC gamers are becoming resigned to the fact that modern games are driving up VRAM requirements, and face having to pay handsomely for GPU upgrades.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
Games studios have historically struggled to optimize their projects for the step down Xbox model - with software engineers complaining about memory allocation issues thanks to a smaller pool of VRAM - the Series S CPU and GPU have to fight over a total of 10 GB GDDR6 system memory. Microsoft listened to this feedback and made necessary changes last year - an updated SDK was released and a video briefing explained: "Hundreds of additional megabytes of memory are now available to Xbox Series S developers...This gives developers more control over memory, which can improve graphics performance in memory-constrained conditions."
End users are now joining in and complaining about Xbox Series S VRAM limitations - news outlets this week have been alerted to feedback appearing on Reddit. A /Gaming subreddit member called jokekiller94 has posted an entry titled "Apparently the Series S can run out of VRAM…" along with a photograph that captures the unfortunate incident on their system of choice. The Xbox Error message states: "Out of video memory trying to allocate a rendering resource. Make sure your video card has the minimum required memory, try lowering the resolution and/or closing other applications that are running. Exiting..." this warning sits over a frozen Borderlands 3 session. A commenter, bacon_sammer, confirms that they are also experiencing multiple crashes with same game and platform. It is slightly amusing that the example Series S recommends that its user adjust video card's settings, but this is not a problem exclusive to the home console segment. PC gamers are becoming resigned to the fact that modern games are driving up VRAM requirements, and face having to pay handsomely for GPU upgrades.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source