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Xbox Project Helix may cost $1,200 with massive performance upgrades

The next-gen system could blur the line between gaming PC and traditional console.

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Microsoft’s next-generation Xbox, announced to be Project Helix, could come with a much higher price tag than previous consoles. According to new claims from well-known hardware YouTuber Moore’s Law Is Dead, the upcoming system may cost anywhere between $999 and $1,200, depending on configuration. If accurate, that would place the next Xbox in a completely different territory compared to traditional consoles.

Great start to the morning with Team Xbox, where we talked about our commitment to the return of Xbox including Project Helix, the code name for our next generation console.

Project Helix will lead in performance and play your Xbox and PC games. Looking forward to chatting about… pic.twitter.com/Xx5rpVnAZI

— Asha (@asha_shar) March 5, 2026

For context, the Xbox Series X launched at $499 in 2020, while the more affordable Series S debuted at $299. A price approaching four figures would signal a major shift in how Microsoft positions its future hardware. The rumored pricing surfaced alongside new speculation about the system’s performance. According to the same analysis, Project Helix could deliver massive improvements over the current generation, potentially offering several times the rasterization performance and dramatically stronger ray tracing capabilities.

A console that behaves more like a gaming PC

Leaks suggest Project Helix will be powered by a next-generation AMD system-on-chip combining Zen 6 CPU cores with RDNA 5 graphics, pushing the console much closer to high-end gaming PC territory. The rumored Magnus APU reportedly carries about 30% more Compute Units than the Xbox Series X, but the shift to RDNA 5 could make a bigger difference than the raw numbers suggest. Each compute unit is said to be roughly 65% faster, potentially translating into a sizeable real-world performance jump. Additionally, the CPU may use a hybrid layout with three Zen 6 cores and eight Zen 6c cores, a setup designed to handle both traditional console titles and more PC-like workloads.

Would you buy this PC if it was $1500 but also played Xbox games as well as PC games?

Also it’s a lot smaller and fits in your living room.

Seeing some people wondering who would even want something like this.

I guess it’s just me. pic.twitter.com/z8hQujSwvH

— Cary Golomb (@carygolomb) March 6, 2026

Some estimates suggest ray tracing performance could improve significantly compared to the Xbox Series X, though those figures remain speculative for now. Microsoft has already confirmed that Project Helix is in development and hinted that it will “lead in performance” while supporting both Xbox and PC games. Even so, the rumored $999 to $1,200 price range raises an interesting question: how far can consoles stretch into premium territory before they begin competing directly with gaming PCs? That would be dramatically higher than any previous Xbox launch price, but it may also reflect the rising cost of advanced silicon, faster memory, and next-generation graphics hardware.

If Project Helix truly delivers the kind of performance these leaks suggest, Microsoft could be aiming for something new altogether: a machine that sits somewhere between a traditional console and a high-end gaming PC.

Varun Mirchandani
Varun is an experienced technology journalist and editor with over eight years in consumer tech media. His work spans…
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