Xbox One

(November 22, 2013-)
Logo: On a green background, we see the same X Sphere from the Xbox 360 logo (however the sphere is now white instead of gray) zooming out and rotating into place. "XBOX ONE" fades in. Then three small dots appear underneath the logo as the Xbox One is loading.

Variants:
 * On the Xbox One X, the startup begins with the console's system-on-a-chip exploding. When the system-on-a-chip explodes, streaks of lines travel towards the the screen. Then, the startup plays as normal. However, there is a bright light sweeping across the floor, making the text glow and the lighting of the sphere brighten. This would later be used as the regular startup screen for later Xbox One dashboards until the production of the console stopped.
 * In 2017, the startup received a minor update, the dots have been removed and the lighting in the sphere is brighter.
 * There is a version without the "ONE" in the logo. This was used in commercials, running at 24fps.
 * Sometimes, at the end, the Microsoft logo appears for a split-second.

Technique: CGI. It runs at 30fps.

Music/Sounds: The ending of the Xbox 360 startup, but low-pitched like the early audio of the 2nd Xbox 360 startup.

Music/Sounds Variant: On the Xbox One X startup, a whoosh-like buildup sound effect can be heard, followed by a sound of an explosion and a series of whooshes when streaks of lines travel towards the the screen.

Availability: ut still used, as Microsoft stopped producing the Xbox One family of video game consoles in order to focus on the Xbox Series family of video game consoles near the end of 2020. It was seen at the end of the trailer showing off the Xbox One console and was later used as the official startup for the console itself. All of those models of the Xbox One family (which includes the original model, the Xbox One S, the Xbox One S All Digital Edition, and the Xbox One X) can still be found on most online stores/auction sites, video game stores or thrift stores.

Final Note
Around the end of 2020, Microsoft had decided to stop the production of the Xbox One family of video game consoles in order to focus on the Xbox Series family of video game consoles (which includes the Xbox Series S and X), though this was not publicly confirmed by Microsoft until Cindy Walker (senior director of Xbox console product marketing) confirmed the console's discontinuation in an article by The Verge on January 13, 2022. The lineup will continue to receive firmware patches for the foreseeable future.