Logo
Logo
Logo
in
clear search
Log in

Knowledge Hub

  • Games
  • Consoles
  • Condition & Grading
  • Pricing & Value
  • Buying & Selling
  • Market Insights
  • Glossary

Buy on Golisto

  • How it works
  • Auctions & Buy Now
  • Shipping
  • Trade protection

Sell on Golisto

  • How it works
  • Private sellers
  • Partner shops
  • Fees
  • Verified
  • Tools & bulk upload
  • Premium auctions

Trust & Safety

  • Escrow & protection
  • Verification
  • Ratings & rules

Help

  • FAQ
  • Contact
  • Buyers
  • Sellers
  • Disputes

About Golisto

  • Mission
  • Team
  • Press
  • Careers
  • Partners

Legal

  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies
  • Accessibility
dao
dhl
gls
visa
mastercard
paypal
applepay
klarna
amex
Great4.2 / 56 reviews
regionWorld
languageEnglish
currencyEUR

© Golisto ApS - Made with ❤️ in Copenhagen.

Explore: Microsoft Xbox 360

Explore matching items from sellers across Europe.

Related Searches
Video Gamesvideo games & consolesmicrosoft xboxcibracing

Condition

Related buyer guides

  • xboxBuying an Xbox 360 Without Inheriting the Red Ring of DeathThe most honest number on a used Xbox 360 isn't the asking price — it's the amp rating printed beside the power socket. Flip the console over. 16.5A means a launch-era Xenon, 14.2A means a Falcon, and 12.1A means a Jasper — the one revision of the original "fat" 360 that runs cool enough to trust. Microsoft built these machines by the tens of millions across half a dozen motherboard revisions, and from the outside they're all the same white or black wedge. The label is where the truth lives. E
  • Condition & GradingThe Original Xbox Clock Capacitor Is Eating Your ConsoleEvery unserviced original Xbox from the early production runs is carrying a small time bomb on its motherboard. It's called the clock capacitor — a stubby little component whose only job is to keep the system clock ticking while the console is unplugged — and on revision 1.0 through 1.5 boards it has a well-earned reputation for leaking electrolyte as it ages. That fluid is corrosive. It creeps out from under the capacitor, eats the copper traces around it, and does all of this silently while th
  • xboxCollecting Xbox Series X|S Before the Discs DisappearThe Xbox Series S can't read a disc. There's no drive to attach, no workaround — the small white half of Microsoft's November 2020 launch pair simply assumes you'll never own a physical game. For collectors, that one design call splits this generation down the middle: hardware you can shelve and keep, and a software library quietly migrating to licences on a server you don't control. Which makes collecting the Series X|S while it's still on shelves an odd, slightly urgent hobby. The desirable s