Apple raised MacBook prices. Now Microsoft raised Xbox prices — up to $150 per console, the third hike in 13 months. The reason is the same: AI ate the memory supply. But the Xbox story is worse — because consoles are sold at a loss. Microsoft can’t absorb this. Gamers pay.
Xbox Price Hikes — August 1
Series S (512GB)
+$100
→ ~$500
Series X (1TB)
+$150
→ ~$750
Memory costs
2.5x
And expected to double again by fall 2027
Why Consoles Are Hit Hardest
Xbox stated it directly: “Consoles are typically not sold at a profit, but instead for less than they cost to make.” The console business model is razors-and-blades — sell hardware at a loss, make money on Game Pass subscriptions and game sales.
When memory costs jump 2.5x, a product already sold below cost becomes deeply unprofitable. Apple can absorb some of the hit because MacBooks have 40%+ gross margins. Xbox has negative margins on hardware. There’s nothing to absorb — every dollar of memory inflation goes directly to the consumer price.
This is the third price increase in 13 months. And Microsoft warned it expects another doubling of memory costs by fall 2027.
The key quote from Xbox: “The entire consumer electronics industry is struggling with the current components crisis, but the effects are particularly hard on consoles.” Translation: when your product is already sold at a loss, every cost increase passes straight through to the customer.
The RAMageddon Scoreboard — One Day
In a single day, June 25, 2026:
Microsoft — Xbox up $100-$150. Third hike in 13 months. Warning of 2x more by 2027.
SK Hynix, Samsung, Micron — record profits. SK Hynix planning $29.4B US IPO.
The Structural Read
THE CONSOLE BUSINESS MODEL IS BREAKING
Razors-and-blades only works when the razor is cheap. When memory costs 2.5x more and you’re already selling below cost, the model collapses. Microsoft has two choices: keep raising prices (lose gamers) or eat the loss (hurt margins). Neither is good. This is why cloud gaming — which doesn’t require consumer hardware — becomes more attractive.
AI COMPANIES DON’T FEEL THIS PAIN
OpenAI just built custom chips to cut inference costs 50%. Anthropic locked in Micron supply. SpaceX has $27B in compute contracts. The AI companies causing the shortage have long-term supply agreements and custom silicon. Consumer electronics companies are buying memory on the spot market at 2.5x prices. The asymmetry is structural.
THE SUBSTRATE TAX IS NOW A POLITICAL ISSUE
When laptops and gaming consoles cost $100-500 more because of AI data centers, it becomes a voter issue. Regulators will eventually ask: should memory allocation be subject to the same scrutiny as other critical supply chains? The tech executive orders this week may be the beginning.
The Bottom Line
Your MacBook costs $200 more. Your Xbox costs $150 more. Your next laptop will cost 15-20% more. The cause is the same across all of them: three memory companies are allocating wafers to AI data centers instead of consumer devices because AI pays more. RAMageddon is not a tech industry story anymore — it’s a consumer price story. And Microsoft just told you it’s going to get worse: memory costs expected to double again by fall 2027.
Sources: CNBC, Xbox Wire, Windows Central — June 25, 2026

















