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Today — 1 November 2025Main stream

Explaining the Next Xbox: PC-Hybrid Console, AMD Magnus APU, & More

By:Sean
31 October 2025 at 21:19
Xbox series X

Over the last couple of weeks, reports of the next Xbox started circulating online. While Microsoft has failed to compete with Sony’s PlayStation in the console wars, the brand isn’t giving up on consoles yet. Xbox as a platform is evolving, and the next console could be leading this charge as it combines PC gaming, cloud gaming, and other aspects. So here’s everything we know about the next Xbox.

Xbox series X

When it might arrive

Most credible leaks and reporting point to a release window that could be between 2026 and 2027. Microsoft could be planning on launching the next Xbox sometime in 2027 or as early as late 2026. This new console is reportedly in the works at the moment, with rumors hinting at the upcoming Xbox hardware being in late stage development. If this is true, the expected release timeline puts Microsoft on a roughly seven year update cycle, which is in line with the previous generation.

Hardware

Under the hood, the biggest change will likely be a jump to much more powerful custom AMD silicon. Multiple sources point to an upgraded Magnus APU, which pairs Zen 6 CPU cores with RDNA 5 graphics hardware. This powerful combination might allow the next Xbox to hit 4K/120fps performance and advanced ray tracing while also enabling PC level features like AI acceleration and broader driver support.

Rumors even suggest a beefier memory subsystem (wider bus and GDDR7 in some leaks), which would let Microsoft push higher fidelity assets and better frame-rate targets. So simply put, the latest Xbox console would offer a major jump in performance over the Xbox Series X.

It’s more than just one console

Microsoft has been clear with its plans for the Xbox name. The focus isn’t on making new hardware/consoles, but also expanding cloud gaming, the Xbox Game Pass gaming library and its accessibility, and even via strategic collaborations. An example of such a partnership is with ASUS, which recently released the ROG Xbox Ally series of gaming handhelds that launched with special optimizations that made it closest to an actual portable Xbox console.

Soon, these hardware partners might also launch TV units and other Xbox Ally-like consoles, which would help bring “Windows in the living room” vision. It remains to be seen how the next Xbox fits in all of this, but it will likely arrive as a “true” Xbox experience, blending PC gaming level hardware with a TV console experience.

Software & ecosystem changes

Perhaps the most strategic shift is software openness. Microsoft has publicly signaled its next Xbox won’t be locked to a single store. Rather, games could be sold across multiple storefronts, with another focus on backward compatibility with the entire Xbox library.

Combine that with Game Pass, cloud streaming ambitions and tighter Windows integration, and the next Xbox is less a single product and more a distributed gaming ecosystem. For consumers, this could mean more choice about where to buy games and smoother cross-device play, assuming platform partners and publishers cooperate.

What this means for gamers

If the leaks and early statements are accurate, gamers should expect three practical outcomes: first, significantly higher peak performance for native console titles (4K/120 and better ray tracing); second, a broader set of Xbox-branded hardware options so you can pick the device that fits your use case; and third, a more open marketplace that might reduce friction when buying games across devices. However, these upgrades likely come at a cost, with the most immediate being a more premium price tag.

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The post Explaining the Next Xbox: PC-Hybrid Console, AMD Magnus APU, & More appeared first on Gizmochina.

Before yesterdayMain stream

Google Search Console adds Query groups

27 October 2025 at 18:26
Screenshot of Google Search Console

Google added Query groups to the Search Console Insights report. Query groups groups similar search queries together so you can quickly see the main topics your audience searches for.

What Google said. Google wrote, “We are excited to announce Query groups, a powerful Search Console Insights feature that groups similar search queries.”

“Query groups solve this problem by grouping similar queries. Instead of a long, cluttered list of individual queries, you will now see lists of queries representing the main groups that interest your audience. The groups are computed using AI; they may evolve and change over time. They are designed for providing a better high level perspective of your queries and don’t affect ranking,” Google added.

What it looks like. Here is a sample screenshot of this new Query groups report:

You can see that Google is lumping together “search engine optimization, seo optimization, seo website, seo optimierung, search engine optimization (seo), search …” into the “seo” query group in the second line. This shows the site overall is getting 9% fewer clicks on SEO related queries than it did previously.

Availability. Google said query groups will be rolling out gradually over the coming weeks. It is a new card in the Search Console Insights report. Plus, query groups are available only to properties that have a large volume of queries, as the need to group queries is less relevant for sites with fewer queries.

Why we care. Many SEOs have been grouping these queries into these clusters manually or through their own tools. Now, Google will do it for you, making it easier for more novie SEOs and beginner SEOs to understand.

More details will be posted in this help document soon.

Google working on fixing Search Console performance report delay

24 October 2025 at 14:53
Screenshot of Google Search Console

Google Search Console’s performance report is stuck and has not shown an update in the main report since Sunday, October 19th. Google confirmed the issue and said it will catch up.

What it looks like. As I said on the Search Engine Roundtable, before Google confirmed the issue, the performance reports for all Search Console profiles are stuck on Sunday. Here is a sample chart:

More details. The weird thing is that when you dive in to 24 hour data, you do get recent data. So it does seem like the data is being collected and stored but it just isn’t being rendered in most of the reporting.

In addition, when you click on the by date breakdown under the chart, Google is only showing data as recent as this past Sunday.

Again, I really think the data is not lost and will soon show up in the main reporting charts soon.

What Google said. Daniel Waisberg from the Google Search Central team who works with Search Console said on X, “We’re catching up.”

Here is that post:

We're catching up!

— Daniel Waisberg (@danielwaisberg) October 24, 2025

Why we care. If you’ve been looking to run reports for clients or stakeholders, you may have to wait a few more days for this report to catch up. It is not a bug just for your site, but for all sites in Google Search Console and it should be fixed soon.

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