Xbox One X (2017)

Microsoft's Xbox One supports 4K video at up to 60Hz through a single HDMI 1.4 port capped at 18Gbps bandwidth. Three USB 3.0 ports on the rear (5Gbps each) handle data, external storage, and controller charging. The optical audio output sends Dolby Digital or Dolby Atmos surround through any compatible receiver or soundbar. Here's the complete port breakdown.

Xbox Series S – 1TB Carbon Black (2023)

Microsoft's Xbox Series S targets 1440p at 120Hz (or 4K at 60Hz) through a single HDMI 2.1 port with 48Gbps bandwidth and VRR/ALLM. Three USB 3.0 ports on the rear handle data and charging; the front USB-C port doesn't support video output. A standard HDMI cable is included, but upgrading to Ultra High Speed HDMI 2.1 unlocks the full 1440p@120Hz potential on compatible screens. Here's the complete port breakdown.

Xbox Series S – 1TB Robot White (2024)

Microsoft's Xbox Series S targets 1440p at 120Hz (or 4K at 60Hz) through a single HDMI 2.1 port with 48Gbps bandwidth and VRR/ALLM. Three USB 3.0 ports on the rear handle data and charging; the front USB-C port doesn't support video output. A standard HDMI cable is included, but upgrading to Ultra High Speed HDMI 2.1 unlocks the full 1440p@120Hz potential on compatible screens. Here's the complete port breakdown.

Xbox Series S (2020)

Microsoft's Xbox Series S targets 1440p at 120Hz (or 4K at 60Hz) through a single HDMI 2.1 port with 48Gbps bandwidth and VRR/ALLM. Three USB 3.0 ports on the rear handle data and charging; the front USB-C port doesn't support video output. A standard HDMI cable is included, but upgrading to Ultra High Speed HDMI 2.1 unlocks the full 1440p@120Hz potential on compatible screens. Here's the complete port breakdown.

Xbox Series X – 1TB Digital Edition (Robot White, 2024)

Microsoft's flagship Xbox Series X supports 4K gaming up to 120Hz through a single HDMI 2.1 port with full 48Gbps bandwidth and VRR/ALLM. Three USB 3.0 ports on back deliver data and charging; the front USB-C doesn't support video output. A standard HDMI cable ships included, but a dedicated Ultra High Speed HDMI 2.1 cable ensures you hit 4K@120Hz on compatible TVs. Here's the complete port breakdown.

Xbox Series X – 2TB Galaxy Black Special Edition (2024)

Microsoft's flagship Xbox Series X supports 4K gaming up to 120Hz through a single HDMI 2.1 port with full 48Gbps bandwidth and VRR/ALLM. Three USB 3.0 ports on back deliver data and charging; the front USB-C doesn't support video output. A standard HDMI cable ships included, but a dedicated Ultra High Speed HDMI 2.1 cable ensures you hit 4K@120Hz on compatible TVs. Here's the complete port breakdown.

Xbox Series X (2020)

Microsoft's flagship Xbox Series X supports 4K gaming up to 120Hz through a single HDMI 2.1 port with full 48Gbps bandwidth and VRR/ALLM. Three USB 3.0 ports on back deliver data and charging; the front USB-C doesn't support video output. A standard HDMI cable ships included, but a dedicated Ultra High Speed HDMI 2.1 cable ensures you hit 4K@120Hz on compatible TVs. Here's the complete port breakdown.

XGIMI Horizon Ultra (2023)

Billed as the world's first 4K long-throw home projector with Dolby Vision, this hybrid LED/laser unit pushes 2,200 ANSI lumens with rich color accuracy. Two HDMI 2.1 ports — one with eARC — handle modern consoles and media players at up to 4K@60Hz. A pair of USB-A ports and an optical audio output round out the wired connections, while built-in Harman Kardon speakers deliver surprisingly capable sound. Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 5.2 are on board for wireless streaming.

Yamaha HS5 (2013)

The Yamaha HS5 is a 5-inch bi-amplified nearfield studio monitor with a 45W LF + 25W HF amplifier pair and the brand's familiar white-cone cosmetic. The rear panel provides one balanced XLR input and one balanced 1/4-inch TRS phone jack so it accepts either pro-level gear or instrument/keyboard outputs without an adapter. Two rotary/switch controls — Room Control and High Trim — shape response for boundary placement and acoustic variations. AC power arrives via a detachable IEC C14 inlet.

Yamaha RX-A2A (2020)

Three of the seven HDMI inputs are HDMI 2.1 with 8K@60Hz and 4K@120Hz support, while the other four run at HDMI 2.0 speeds — note that the 2.1 ports are capped at 24Gbps, so higher-bandwidth features rely on Display Stream Compression. The single HDMI output handles eARC for lossless Dolby Atmos and DTS-HD from your TV. A built-in MM phono stage, optical and coaxial digital inputs, and 100W per channel across 7.2 channels make this AVENTAGE model a solid mid-range choice. Dual subwoofer pre-outs allow a two-sub configuration.

Yamaha RX-A4A (2021)

Every one of the seven HDMI inputs on this AVENTAGE-series receiver is full HDMI 2.1 with 8K@60Hz and 4K@120Hz support — no compromises on which port you plug your console or media player into. Three HDMI outputs (two main plus one dedicated zone) make multi-room or dual-display setups straightforward. Dual optical and one coaxial digital input give plenty of room for legacy sources alongside a built-in MM phono stage. Yamaha's Surround:AI technology dynamically optimizes the 7.2-channel output in real time.

Yamaha RX-V6A (2020)

Seven HDMI inputs provide plenty of room for sources, though only the first three run at full HDMI 2.1 bandwidth with 8K@60Hz and 4K@120Hz support — the remaining four top out at HDMI 2.0 speeds. The single HDMI output supports eARC, so one cable to your TV handles both video and lossless audio return. A built-in MM phono stage lets you plug a turntable directly in without an external preamp. MusicCast multi-room streaming works over both Wi-Fi and the wired 100Mbps Ethernet connection.

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