Ever since Nintendo formally announced the Switch 2 earlier in the year, I'd convinced myself I was going to buy one. The hardware looks a good step forward, third-party support on Switch 1 was great, and I don't know... who doesn't love a new toy to mess around with, right? The thing is though, I've not really managed to find a reason to put down all that money to invest in the ecosystem yet, and after an impromptu shopping trip where I walked away with a cheap Xbox Series S instead, that reason feels like it's moving further and further down the line.
Let me elaborate on that shopping trip first. I recently headed into my local town centre here in the UK for just a good old browse - I've always got gaming goodies on the mind but I didn't really have anything specific I was going for. I checked out a local pawn shop and saw both an under-RRP Switch 2 and a dirt-cheap Xbox Series S - with a slot in my newly-constructed mancave up for grabs. In the end I walked away with the Xbox, and I'm very pleased with my decision for a host of reasons.

One of them is the hardware itself, of course. I've had an Xbox Series X since the start of the generation (taking up a living room spot ever since) and I'm very happy with it - it's been great to play current-gen games in high fidelity on console and make use of physical media. However, I've only spent little bits of time here and there on friends' Series S consoles, and after now owning one for a good few days, I'm massively impressed by what it can do.
So far, I've checked out some 120FPS Gears Reloaded & Modern Warfare 3, booted up the "flawless" performer Cronos: The New Dawn, cruised around on Test Drive Unlimited Solar Crown and played a few FPS-boosted backwards compatible titles - and the experience really is amazing for the price of this thing. I paid less than £150 here in the UK, and you can't get gaming performance like this for anywhere close to that price. Last-gen consoles like the PS4 are the most direct comparison when it comes to pricing on the UK market, and the experience of using the Series S on a day-to-day basis is just miles better than those sluggish Gen 8 consoles.