Now to be clear, there are some areas where the PS5 has the advantage, but based on what we know today, the Xbox Series X looks like the more powerful console.

PS5: Specs, price, release date and how it compares to gaming laptopsXbox Series X: specs, price and how it compares to gaming laptopsXbox Series X specs revealed by Microsoft: Your move, PS5

As you can see from the chart, the Xbox Series X has an advantage in critical areas like the CPU and the GPU.   While both share similar architecture, the Xbox Series X has both a higher clock speed with its custom 8-cores AMD Zen 2 processor running at 3.8 GHz versus the 3.5 GHz of the comparable CPU in the PS5. Moving to the GPU, the Xbox Series X is ahead with its custom RDNA 2 capable of 12 TFLOPS courtesy of its 52 CUs at 1.825GHz when compared to the custom RDNA 2 in the PS5 generating 10.28 TFLOPS with 36 CUs at 2.23 GHz.  The one area that the PS5 really stands out in is the SSD, which Sony understandably made a primary focus of its announcement. The PS5’s oddly-sized (825GB) SSD can transfer data at 5.5 GB/s (raw) or 8-9 GB/s (compressed), which is 100x the speed of the PS4 and considerably faster than the Xbox Series X’s 1TB SSD at 2.4 GB/s (raw) and 4.8 GB/s (compressed).  With all of that said, real-world performance doesn’t always align perfectly with raw specs, so we are eager to get our hands-on both consoles and find out which console more effectively harnesses all of that power.