Xbox one x 60fps: List of Xbox One X Enhanced games at 60 FPS

List of Xbox One X Enhanced games at 60 FPS

Xbox One X
(Image credit: Matt Brown | Windows Central)

Microsoft’s flagship Xbox One X console brings a variety of upgrades to «Xbox One X Enhanced» games, including improved resolutions, frame rates, and graphical fidelity. However, third-party developers handle most upgrades, meaning priorities and end results can vary between titles.

For the smoothest Xbox One gameplay, you’ll want high frames-per-second (FPS), indicating how many on-screen images are output every second. The higher the frame rate, the smoother animations feel, leading to generally heightened responsiveness.

We’ve rounded up every Xbox One X Enhanced game available now which targets 60 FPS or offers a 60 FPS performance mode.

Related: List of all Xbox One X Enhanced games

See Xbox One X at Microsoft

Complete list of Xbox One X 60 FPS games

Forza Horizon 4 (Image credit: Microsoft)

Leveraging the additional horsepower of Xbox One X, all of these titles target 60 FPS when running on the console.

A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z

Note: Without official documentation on Xbox One X Enhanced frame rates, this list has been comprised with extensive research from varying third-party sources. If we’ve overlooked a game, let us know in the comments.

A

  • Aaero
  • Alteric
  • ARK: Survival Evolved
  • Assault Android Cactus
  • Attack on Titan 2

B

  • Battlefield 1
  • Battle Chasers: Nightwar
  • Battlezone Gold Edition
  • Brawlout
  • Burnout Paradise Remastered

C

  • Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare
  • Call of Duty: WWII
  • Call of Duty: Black Ops 4
  • Cities: Skylines
  • Claws of Furry
  • Claybook
  • Construction Simulator 2

D

  • Danger Zone
  • DARK SOULS: Remastered
  • DayZ
  • Deep Rock Galactic
  • Diablo III: Reaper of Souls — Ultimate Evil Edition
  • DOOM
  • DRAGON BALL FIGHTERZ

E

  • Elea
  • Elex
  • Elite Dangerous
  • EVERSPACE

F

  • F1 2017
  • F1 2018
  • FIFA 18
  • Forsaken Remastered
  • Fortnite
  • Forza Motorsport 7
  • Forza Horizon 4

G

  • Gears of War 4
  • Gene Rain
  • GRIDD: Retroenhanced

H

  • Halo: The Master Chief Collection
  • Halo 5: Guardians
  • Hellblade: Senua’s Sacrifice
  • Hitman
  • Hyper Sentinel

I

  • Immortal Redneck
  • Injustice 2

K

  • Killer Instinct
  • Killing Floor 2

L

  • Life is Strange: Before the Storm

M

  • Madden NFL 18
  • Mantis Burn Racing
  • Marvel vs. Capcom: Infinite
  • Megaton Rainfall
  • METAL GEAR SURVIVE

N

  • NBA 2K18
  • NBA 2K19
  • Neon Chrome
  • NieR:Automata BECOME AS GODS Edition
  • Nine Parchments
  • No Man’s Sky

O

  • ONRUSH
  • Outlast 2
  • Overwatch

P

  • Paladins
  • Path of Exile
  • Portal Knights
  • Pro Evolution Soccer 2018
  • Pro Evolution Soccer 2019
  • Project Cars 2

R

  • Rainbow Six Siege
  • Red Faction Guerilla Re-Mars-tered
  • Redout: Lightspeed Edition
  • RESIDENT EVIL 7 biohazard
  • Rise of the Tomb Raider
  • Robocraft Infinity

S

  • Shadow of the Tomb Raider
  • Shining Resonance Refrain
  • SMITE
  • Snake Pass
  • Sonic Forces
  • Sonic Mania
  • Spacelords
  • Star Wars Battlefront II
  • Super Lucky’s Tale

T

  • Tesla vs Lovecraft
  • Tempest 4000
  • The Surge
  • The Talos Principle
  • The Vanishing of Ethan Carter
  • The Witcher III: Wild Hunt
  • Thumper
  • Titan Quest
  • Titanfall 2
  • Transcripted

U

  • UFC 3
  • Unravel Two

W

  • Warhammer 40,000: Inquisitor — Martyr
  • Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus
  • See at Microsoft
  • See at Amazon

Which existing (or upcoming) Xbox One X games are you hoping to see with 60 FPS support? Let us know your top picks below.

Matt Brown is Windows Central’s Senior Editor, Xbox & PC, at Future. Following over seven years of professional consumer technology and gaming coverage, he’s focused on the world of Microsoft’s gaming efforts. You can follow him on Twitter @mattjbrown.

Xbox One X vs Xbox One S vs All-Digital Edition

Why you can trust Pocket-lint

(Pocket-lint) — The Xbox Series X and Series S may now be the default consoles in the Xbox family, but the last-gen Xbox One machines are still attractive propositions.

The Xbox One S, for example, is available as an entry-level proposition, while you can still get an Xbox One X or Xbox One S All-Digital Edition from eBay and many resellers.

The only question is which Xbox One should you choose? We give you the rundown to make a buying decision a little easier.

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Graphics

One of the major differences between the last-gen machines lies with graphical hardware and the ability to render full 4K visuals.

The Xbox One S and All-Digital Edition are both capable of up to 1080p graphics running at 60fps (as on games such as Forza Horizon 4). Not all games achieve those heady heights, but the included 12 GCN compute units, running at 914MHz can reach it. The consoles also upscale all video output to 4K for compatible TVs, but games do not run in Ultra HD natively.

Xbox One X, on the other hand, is capable of full 4K gaming visuals running at 60fps, thanks to graphics processing that consists of 40 customised compute units running at 1.172GHz. That’s much more powerful and faster than the other machines in the family.

All three consoles are compatible with games that run in HDR.

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CPU and memory

Like with the graphics, Xbox One X is much more powerful than either Xbox One S in central processing. It runs on eight custom x86 cores, clocked at speeds of 2.3GHz. The Xbox One S consoles also have eight cores but they are slower, running at 1. 75GHz.

The One X also bosses things in RAM. There is 12GB of GDDR5 RAM with bandwidth of up to 326GB/s. The Xbox One S and All-Digital Edition each have 8GB of DDR3 RAM and 32MB of ESRAM, with bandwidth of 68GB/s and 219GB/s respectively.

The upshot of this is that developers get far more memory and processing speeds to play with on Xbox One X.

Games

All games for Xbox work across the entire family of devices. You can buy an Xbox game and it’ll work on all three consoles, albeit with different grades of performance.

The only exception to this is that the Xbox One S All-Digital Edition will only be able to play games bought digitally. You cannot use game discs bought from a separate store as there is no drive.

Xbox One X versions have the potential to be far better graphically than their Xbox One S counterparts — with greater resolution, draw distances and the like. It’s something Microsoft calls «enhanced». However, the gameplay technically remains the same. As does the price considering the game is the same bought copy.

It’s a similar deal with the PS4 Pro. All PlayStation 4 games work on Pro and the standard PS4, they just look better on the Pro — for the most part.

All three can run a large collection of Xbox 360 and original Xbox games in backward compatibility.

  • How Xbox One backwards compatibility works: The Xbox 360 games list and more

They also have access to Xbox Game Pass, Microsoft’s game subscription service that offers hundreds of full games — including new titles — to download and play for just one monthly fee. You can find out all about it here: Xbox Game Pass games list, price and everything you need to know.

Home entertainment

The Xbox One S was the first games console to offer 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray playback, with HDR picture tech to boot.

This is something the Xbox One X boasts too, with even better performance, we have found, and faster loading times.

As the Xbox One S All-Digital edition does not come with a disc drive, it cannot play 4K Blu-rays — or any other type of disc media, for that matter.

All other major streaming apps and services are on board all three consoles, though. This includes Netflix, Amazon Video and Disney+, with each running supported shows and movies in 4K HDR and Dolby Vision, where possible. You will need a TV that supports later versions of Dolby Vision, however. For example, older LG OLED TVs do not.

Dolby Atmos for extra surround sound channels is also supported across the Xbox consoles.

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Xbox One X vs Xbox One S: Conclusion

There is little doubt that Xbox One X is a more powerful, more graphically competent games console than the Xbox One S or its digital-only counterpart, but you have to pay a premium price for such a premium machine.

If you are content with Full HD gaming, the Xbox One S is an excellent games machine and 4K Blu-ray player. And, the All-Digital Edition might be able to fit an even tighter budget, at the cost of ditching the ability to spin Blu-rays, disc games, and the like.

If your budget can stretch though, we also thoroughly recommend you check out the Xbox Series S and Xbox Series X.

  • Xbox Series X vs Xbox Series S: What’s the difference?

Writing by Rik Henderson. Editing by Max Freeman-Mills.

at Digital Foundry Tested the Halo Infinite Campaign on Consoles — Hardware at DTF

343 Industries has perfectly optimized the shooter, which runs stable even on the base Xbox One.

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Eurogamer Technical team reviewed the Halo Infinite campaign on Xbox One, One X and Series X|S, and compared the console versions of the game with each other. We chose the main thing from the material.

Performance and resolution

On all four consoles, Halo Infinite runs at dynamic resolution and uses temporal reconstruction technology to improve picture clarity. In each case, the decrease in resolution mainly occurs during dynamic scenes and movement in open locations.

  • Xbox One — 1080p to 720p at 30 fps
  • Xbox One X (quality mode) — 4K to 2400×1440 pixels at 30 fps
  • Xbox One X (performance mode) — 1440p to 1280×720 at 45-60 fps
  • Series S (quality mode) — 1080p at 30 fps
  • Series S (performance mode) — 1080p to 1706×960 pixels at 60 fps
  • Series X (quality mode) — 4K to 2240×1440 at 60 fps
  • Series X (performance mode) — 2460×1440 to 1564×960 pixels at 80-120 fps

Xbox One

The console almost always provides a stable 30 fps, but the game has problems with even distribution of frames. Because of them, there is a feeling that the shooter actually works at a lower frequency.

Xbox One X

Visually, Halo Infinite on One X looks a lot better than the base Xbox One. In quality mode, the game runs at dynamic 4K resolution, which makes the textures of characters, weapons, and the level of detail of locations noticeably higher.

One X still has unstable framepacing in quality mode, but performance mode is available to players. In it, the resolution is reduced to dynamic 1440p, but the frame rate during battles in open locations rises to 45-60 fps.

However, the difference between quality and performance mode on the One X only shows up in some settings, such as shadow quality and detail levels.

Performance (left) and quality (right) mode on Xbox One X

Xbox Series S

The «younger» next-generation console runs at a lower resolution than the Xbox One X. The difference in image quality is noticeable, and the picture on the Series S is generally more «soapy». At the same time, the quality of texture and shadow filtering, as well as the depth of field, are identical on both consoles.

Quality mode on One X (left) and Series S (right)

The quality of textures on consoles is generally very similar, but on Series S they look a bit «blurred» due to the lower resolution. However, in some cases, Series S uses completely different assets that look sharper than their counterparts on One X, despite the difference in resolution.

Some assets are more detailed on Series S (right)

In performance mode, the Series S delivers an almost always stable 60 fps. In addition, the uneven distribution of frames ceases to occur in the game.

As with the One X, there is a small price to pay for increased performance — only some visual parameters are reduced in quality. Digital Foundry reviewer Thomas Morgan recommended playing Halo Infinite on One X and Series S in performance mode.

Xbox Series X

In quality mode on the «senior» console of the new generation, the game runs at a stable 60 fps. If the frame rate drops in dynamic scenes, it stabilizes almost immediately, including thanks to DRS and VRS technology, which improves performance by optimizing shading.

On Series X, Halo Infinite uses higher resolution textures than on Series S. But most of the visual parameters between next-gen consoles and One X are the same.

The

Series X is the only console that supports a performance mode that delivers up to 120 fps. In it, the resolution is in the range from 1564×960 to 2460×1440 pixels, and the frame rate does not fall below 80.

Download time

From main menu

  • Xbox One — 61.67 seconds
  • Xbox One X — 59.27 seconds
  • Series S — 16.7 seconds
  • Series X — 12.6 seconds

After fast travel

  • Xbox One — 8.77 seconds
  • Xbox One X — 8. 9 seconds
  • Series S — 4.75 seconds
  • Series X — 2.83 seconds

Thomas Morgan praised the technical content of Halo Infinite on consoles, but noted that the developers should address the quality mode framing issue and raise the dynamic resolution on the Series S to 1440p if possible.

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Halo Infinite on Xbox One X will still support 60fps

The multiplayer technical test showed how much the developers were able to advance in terms of optimization

A second technical test showed that the 343i has made significant progress in terms of optimizing its upcoming sci-fi action movie Halo Infinite. The game on Xbox One X now runs not just at 60fps, but also at 1440p in performance mode. Of course, to achieve such speed, some minor details had to be put under the knife, but for a multiplayer mode, these are justified sacrifices. During the first test, the console of the outgoing generation of Microsoft did not have such indicators.

Unsurprisingly, the best in terms of graphics is the Xbox Series X version, which supports 2160p at 120 frames per second.

Halo Infinite will be released on November 15 this year.

2021-09-27 16:22:15

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