Xbox Expansion Cards Are Secretly SSDs? Gamers Think So
With storage prices climbing faster than game install sizes, gamers are getting creative and a little rebellious. The latest βhackβ? Turning unused Xbox expansion cards into external SSDs for PCs.
Originally designed for the Xbox Series X|S, these cards are basically NVMe storage in disguise, wrapped in a CFexpress Type B form factor. One curious Reddit user, βu/Dramatic-Shape5574,β decided to test the limits and plugged the card into a CFexpress reader, and Windows recognized it like a regular drive. Suddenly, that βconsole-onlyβ storage wasnβt so exclusive anymore.

Performance is surprisingly decent. Youβre looking at speeds around 1000β1500 MB/s, nowhere near top-tier NVMe drives, but comfortably faster than SATA SSDs. Thatβs enough to run games, store files, and feel like youβve outsmarted the system.
But before you go digging out your wallet, hereβs the catch. Youβll need to format the card, which means saying goodbye to Xbox compatibility. Also, these cards are overpriced compared to standard SSDs, so buying one just for this hack makes no sense.
Other Similar Workarounds
Gamers have been experimenting with all sorts of storage hacks for years. Many repurpose old laptop SSDs by placing them into USB enclosures and using them as portable drives. Others install PS5-compatible NVMe SSDs into PCs when upgrading consoles, effectively recycling high-speed storage. Even traditional internal hard drives and SSDs often get a second life as external drives through simple adapters, showing how flexible storage hardware can be when you think beyond default use cases.
Pros & Cons
This hack is great if you already own an unused expansion card, letting you reuse hardware with performance better than SATA SSDs, but it quickly loses appeal due to high costs, the need for extra adapters, permanent loss of Xbox compatibility after formatting, and a setup process that isnβt exactly beginner-friendly.
This is peak gamer ingenuity, clever, slightly unnecessary, but undeniably cool. If you already have an unused expansion card lying around, itβs a fun and practical experiment. But if youβre starting from scratch, a standard SSD remains the smarter, cheaper, and far less complicated choice.
Read More:
- Lenovo May 19 Event Confirmed: Legion Y70, Y900 Tablet, Razr Fold Incoming
- GameSir Launches Tarantula Controller Series with 8KHz Polling and Multi-Platform Support
- ASUS ROG Open Wireless Earbuds Launched: Price, Features, Battery, Specs
(via)
The post Xbox Expansion Cards Are Secretly SSDs? Gamers Think So appeared first on Gizmochina.