Oh, did you buy the player just to test this out?yeah, Iceman. I tried PMing you about this but it said your inbox was full!! lol.
so I figured I'd post it here to get your attention.
and yeah. I'm talking about upscaling Blu-Rays. It plays regular Blu-Rays fine. it's whether or not it's actually upscaling them to 4K that's the question.
Anyways, I just conducted my test.
There was a Samsung 4K player on sale for roughly the same price as the X1 S. I bought it, got it set up, and tried out my regular Blu-Rays. And on this Samsung player, when I click the display info on my tv, it says the output IS 4K. Even with a regular SD DVD, the output is listed as being in 4K.
So right there, to me, there's some kind of difference going on. and that suggests the S is not upscaling to 4K?
As for quality difference, it's hard to say. But I guess on the Samsung player the colors look a bit brighter and overall crisper ( I used the same TV input settings ).
Regardless about the perceivable quality difference, the tv display info does show different things with the 2 players. So, something's going on........
t:Oh, did you buy the player just to test this out?t:
Good to know. I would have thought your TV would upscale anyway, only one of the devices needs to do that. Either the source does it and sends the upgraded signal or the destination output device does it with the source sending an untampered intact signal which is then upscaled by the TV. But the dedicated 4K player is probably the best device to be doing it. And that would bear out if you are noticing differences. just depends how important those differences are to you. Upscaling is just guesswork at how best to fill unknown pixels so I never really consider it to be important.
Might be work checking with Support though on both of your issues and see what they have to say.

Hey X, can you see a definite difference between the Samsung 4K when playing blu ray's vs the Xbox One S? I know you're going off what your TV is telling you, but are you seeing a for sure difference?

Your TV will upscale the image if the source doesn't. Any if the TV is a better upscaler than the source you'd probably want that (although a dedicated 4K player should be best in that area).

If you want the best quality separates are nearly always the way to go. If you want convenience and a lower price you go with the all in one. The X1S is great value to be including a 4K player along with a games console but I didn't know rival 4K players were that cheap now in the US. The one I got was the best one available at the time but it was the equivalent of about $1k back then.yeah. true. This Samsung player is also pretty nifty cuz you can stick a CD in it and rip to a USB stick apparently.
oh, and it was able to play the 4K version of Sony's Meeting videos where they unveiled the Pro. So, finally, I can watch that on a 4K/HDR tv ( neither the S nor my PS4 were able to play the 4K video files ).
well, I have another week before deciding what to do with the S. so I will think about it.
maybe it is better to have a dedicated 4K player and a dedicated "4K" game machine ( the Pro ) instead of everything all in one.
maybe I should have stuck to my original plan when I went to get my 4K tv instead of getting distracted by the shiny object aka X1 S.![]()
t:
If you want the best quality separates are nearly always the way to go. If you want convenience and a lower price you go with the all in one. The X1S is great value to be including a 4K player along with a games console but I didn't know rival 4K players were that cheap now in the US. The one I got was the best one available at the time but it was the equivalent of about $1k back then.t:
![]()

There was no guarantee that consoles were going to have 4K players as at the time physical was dying a death; it's only recently that sales have surprised. Plus of course the Pro decided not to go with it so the entire gamble would have been on Xbox choosing to have one. And I'm a home cinema enthusiast so I would have wanted a top player anyway to take advantage of my other equipment and also future equipment I want to get. For eg the S won't be able to decode Dolby Atmos (used for ceiling speakers) which are next on my list.that's why you don't buy this **** right away.![]()
but yeah, this Samsung player was on sale for $320 ( $80 off ), so that plus a new hdmi cable makes it equal to the 1TB X1 S. Warranty was the same cost, too, but the Samsung lasts 4 years instead of the S's 2.
So, essentially, it's an even "trade" between the 2.
There was no guarantee that consoles were going to have 4K players as at the time physical was dying a death; it's only recently that sales have surprised. Plus of course the Pro decided not to go with it so the entire gamble would have been on Xbox choosing to have one. And I'm a home cinema enthusiast so I would have wanted a top player anyway to take advantage of my other equipment and also future equipment I want to get. For eg the S won't be able to decode Dolby Atmos (used for ceiling speakers) which are next on my list.
It's only an even trade if you don't really value the gaming side of Xbox. With the Samsung you'd still need to buy another device for that.

I guess you're on a clock if you're worried about returning it but I would contact Support for an official answer before you assume you've been misled and read too much more into it. If what you described is the case it would be the same for everyone who buys the console and would turn into a wider issue. I don't know US law but you can get your money back outside of the regular returns period if something doesn't perform as described/advertised here. Especially with this as some people might only buy a 4K TV some months or more later than when they buy the console and not be aware of things like this till then.that is true. and that's what I will have to weigh.
One main reason why I went with the S was that I thought I could get "everything" all in one device. but now, that seems like it might not be the case. If the S doesn't upscale regular Blu-Rays, but a standalone 4K player like the Samsung does and does it better, that kind of shifts my interest away from the S and towards a standalone 4K player. which would then compliment the Pro which would be a more powerful game machine than the S.
I also don't like being misled as a consumer. that's always a big no-no and turnoff for me.
indeed, the more I discuss it with you, the more I'm inclined to keep the Samsung player and return the S while I still can get a refund.
I'd say, if given the choice, I'd value the all-in-one media aspect of the S more than just the gaming aspect alone.
I guess you're on a clock if you're worried about returning it but I would contact Support for an official answer before you assume you've been misled and read too much more into it. If what you described is the case it would be the same for everyone who buys the console and would turn into a wider issue. I don't know US law but you can get your money back outside of the regular returns period if something doesn't perform as described/advertised here. Especially with this as some people might only buy a 4K TV some months or more later than when they buy the console and not be aware of things like this till then.
When the TV is telling you the signal received is 4K it doesnt mean any sharpening or improvement has taken place (and it also means that the TV upscaling will be turned off). A 1080p signal can be upscaled identically to a 4K signal for eg, the upscale there just refers to filling out the equivalent 4K pixels with 4 multiples of the exact same pixels for a 4K Image. Only the size of the image is therefore being upscaled (a 1080p image on a 4K screen would otherwise take up ¼ of the 4K screen) and that means no added value and that the TV would do a better job. So any product with an inferior scaler to your TV will make the image worse than it otherwise would be. If you add on the multitude of different settings that every TV has for 4K and HDR (as discussed earlier even HDMI ports are set up as default not to show HDR) getting these correct even for AV veterans in this AV generation is not quite straighthforward. Xbox Support and your TV manufacturer should be your first port of call before any panic sets in as it might be an issue easily solved or even something that is about to fixed by software update.
Aside from that I dont know how good your 4K players scaler is but if you can barely tell the difference between that and when the TV upscales you need to decide how much you value that slight edge if it comes at the cost of investing in multiple devices. On the plus side of separates your 4K discs should look better on the player than they would on a consoles player (not confirmed yet though and Sonys blu-ray player was a good one) and definitely better than streaming.
