The WD_Black C50 2TB expansion card for Xbox Series X|S is down to $249.99 at Amazon. That’s technically $375 off a $624.99 list price, but let’s be honest about what’s going on here.
About That “60% Off”
The $624.99 list price is inflated. Nobody was paying that. WD’s own MSRP for the 2TB C50 has bounced around, and the “was” price here is doing a lot of heavy lifting. What matters is whether $250 for 2TB of Xbox expansion storage is a good deal on its own terms.
It is. This is the lowest price we’ve tracked in our 90-day window, and 2TB of officially licensed Xbox expansion storage under $250 hasn’t really happened before. The math works out to $125 per terabyte, which is solid for proprietary console storage.
What You’re Getting
The C50 is one of two officially licensed expansion options for Xbox Series X|S. It plugs into the dedicated expansion slot on the back of the console. No tools, no disassembly. Quick Resume works across games stored on it, and you get the full velocity architecture performance that internal storage provides. You can’t get that from a standard USB external drive.
2TB is enough to hold roughly 15-20 modern Xbox games depending on file sizes. For context, a game like Starfield runs about 125GB. Call of Duty installs keep creeping past 150GB. Storage fills up fast on these consoles.
The Catch
You’re paying a premium for proprietary storage. A standard 2TB NVMe SSD costs $100-130 right now. But you can’t use a standard NVMe in the Xbox expansion slot. Microsoft locked the format down, and only Seagate and WD_Black make officially licensed cards. That’s the tax you pay for plug-and-play console storage with full performance.
The Competition
The Seagate Storage Expansion Card 1TB is $199 at Amazon. That’s $199 per terabyte versus $125 per terabyte on the WD_Black 2TB. If you need the space, the WD card is the better per-GB value by a wide margin. If 1TB is genuinely enough for you, the Seagate saves you $50 upfront. But most people who’ve filled their internal storage once will fill 1TB again pretty quickly.
Should You Buy It
If you’ve been shuffling games on and off your Xbox to manage storage, this solves the problem. $250 is real money for a storage accessory, no question. But for 2TB at the lowest price we’ve tracked, the value is solid compared to everything else in this locked-down ecosystem.
WD_Black C50 2TB Xbox Expansion Card — $624.99 → $249.99 (lowest tracked price)
Check the deal at Amazon if you’re tired of the uninstall-reinstall cycle.
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