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Toshiba Canvio Gaming 4TB Portable External Hard Drive USB 3.0, Black for PlayStation, Xbox, PC & Mac - HDTX140XK3CA

  • Based on 21,855 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Thursday, May 23
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Color: Black


Capacity: 4TB


Style: Gaming


Features

  • Designed for Gaming Console and PC (check compatibility at Toshiba's Consumer HDD website).
  • Built for gamers. Features a firmware-customized Always-On mode for a responsive gaming experience.
  • Expand your game library. Store up to 100 games* (4TB (1)) (* Estimated game storage assumption is 36 GB per game. The number of games actually stored may vary depending on file size, formatting, programs, and other factors.)
  • Compatible with: PlayStation 5 (Play and store PS4 games / Store PS5 games) and Xbox Series X|S (Play and store Xbox One games / Store Xbox Series X|S games) (*Compatibility may vary depending on users hardware configuration and operating system.)
  • Sleek, compact form factor lets you take your games on the go.
  • 2-year manufacturer's limited warranty (3).

Description

Color:Black | Capacity:4TB | Style:Gaming With the Canvio Gaming portable external hard drive, you won’t have to worry about deleting games to make room for the hottest new release. The 4TB (1) model allows you to hold up to 100 games in a sleek, travel-ready design. The Canvio Gaming is compatible with Xbox, PlayStation, or PC gaming system (2), giving you the freedom to play with ease on your console of choice. [COMPATIBILITY]: Please check compatibility list at Toshiba's Consumer HDD website. A Canvio Gaming drive formatted for use with one console platform will not be compatible with another platform without erasing data and reformatting. Please update your PS5 console to system software Version: 21.01-03.00.00 or later in order to store PS5 games in USB extended storage. To play PS5 games, you need to copy game data from your Canvio Gaming external drive back to your PS5 console storage. To play games that are optimized for Xbox Series X/S, you need to transfer those games from the Canvio Gaming external drive to the Xbox Series X/S console SSD or a Storage Expansion Card. Please refer to PlayStation’s or Xbox’s user manual on using external storage devices. [NOTE]: (1) One Terabyte (1TB) means 10[12] = 1,000,000,000,000 bytes using powers of 10. Actual formatted storage capacity may vary. (2) Compatibility may vary depending on user‘s hardware configuration and operating system. Formatted exFAT. Reformatting may be required for some operating systems. (3) Standard limited warranty terms apply and can be viewed at Toshiba's Consumer HDD website. (4) Product specifications, features, and availability are subject to change without notice. Estimated game storage assumption is 36GB per game. The number of games actually stored may vary depending on file size, formatting, programs, and other factors. Original discs may be required to verify ownership for games purchased and loaded from disc. Internet connection and original game owner’s account may be required.


Hard Drive: ‎4 TB Portable


Brand: ‎Toshiba


Series: ‎Canvio Gaming


Item model number: ‎HDTX140XK3CA


Hardware Platform: ‎PlayStation, Xbox, Mac, PC


Item Weight: ‎0.46 ounces


Product Dimensions: ‎4.37 x 3.15 x 0.77 inches


Item Dimensions LxWxH: ‎4.37 x 3.15 x 0.77 inches


Color: ‎Black


Flash Memory Size: ‎4


Manufacturer: ‎Toshiba


Country of Origin: ‎Philippines


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: ‎No


Date First Available: ‎October 16, 2020


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Thursday, May 23

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • What You Need to Know About Portable Hard Drives
Color: Black Capacity: 4TB Style: Backup
There's a lot of nonsense in the reviews, so I'm going to give you some facts. Feel free to do some research to verify what I'm saying. This is already a wall of text so I won't go into too much detail. (At the end there's an update about my only problem with this particular model and a simple technique for recovering data when the internal drive is still good.) 1) EVERY hard drive manufacturer has failures. EVERY last one. Some are DOA, some take a month or more. It depends on your use. Moving parts break. Vents clog. Chips fry. Boards crack. I tried finding good data, but [statistics jargon]. Commonly reported rates, industry wide are in the 2-5% failure range with some lines doing better or worse. Personally, I've had a great experience with these. 1b) No matter how good, all hard drives eventually die. Count it a win if you can use it until it's too small and slow to be worth keeping. (When that happens, don't forget to secure erase the drive before recycling it.) 1c) People are more likely to complain than praise. Any drive you research will have fewer good user reviews than bad. (See #8 & 9 below.) 1d) Smaller manufacturers get bought out by larger ones. Last year's high-end product may now harbor a low-end drive. Seriously. CYA. Find manufacturers you trust and give them your loyalty. 2) Every USB hard drive, thumb drive, etc. works on Windows, Mac and Linux. There are a few specialty proprietary devices, especially for professional and enterprise equipment, but consumer equipment works on both. Reformat it if you need to. Check it on all your devices before using it (technical reasons). 2b) ExFAT is the usual suspect for cross-platform file sharing. It's not great. It has nothing to hinder data loss (like journaling) and, in my experience, Macs sometimes choke on it. Consider a reputable cross-platform file driver and stick with NTFS or HFS+. Check your drive on all the platforms before using it (technical reasons). If you're using it for backups, only use it for backups. If it's for TimeMachine on a Mac, let TimeMachine reformat it and take it over completely. 2c) Check the options when you buy it and check again in your cart. There are multiple sizes, styles and "support" options. Make sure you're ordering what you think you are. Seriously. I've seen plenty of reviews by people who are really complaining that they ordered the wrong thing. And watch the price when you change options. Check it again in the cart before you check out. 3) Don't move your data – copy it. And save your old drive until your sure the new one is good. Feel free to abuse your new device, perform surface scans, etc. as often as you want when you get it. It's called a burn in. If the drive's mechanics are good, software will watch for failing sectors later (look up S.M.A.R.T.). 3b) This particular drive isn't an SSD, but since I claim to be telling you everything about hard drives... SSDs don't need scans and should not be defragged. It's actually bad for them. 4) Get an online backup service, preferably a reputable one with a zero-knowledge policy, like SpiderOak or Carbonite. That means the provider can't access your data even if they wanted to. It's called security. Hang on to your old drive until your files finish backing up (in case of a failure). Depending on your service, it may not take very long. (Some services check your data to avoid uploading the same data twice.) 5) Electronic equipment, no matter how rugged or solid-state it claims to be, no matter what the ads say, is not intended to be thrown, dropped, sat on, magnetized, electrocuted, submerged, burned, microwaved, or implanted into living beings. It's certainly not meant to be thrown, left in the rain, dropped in the pool, etc. You do that and it breaks. You lose data. Products actually intended for this behavior are expensive. Water resistant is not submersible. Submersible has limits. Shock resistant does not mean it's ok to drop it. 6) Don't use the included backup software, backup service, or built-in password protection. You are not paying for these things. If they were that good, they would be sold independently. If they are, what you have is an ad designed to trick you into using a service you won't bother to cancel. Get your own service. (See #4.) 6b) The first thing you should do is reformat the drive, even if it came formatted. It doesn't take long. Just do it. 7) Portable is good, but if your laptop comes with an external mouse and keyboard, two external drives, a hub... it's not portable anymore. SD cards are pretty cheap and more durable for travel. They're also faster. Keep your drive safe and bring copies. Unless, of course you need a lot of space. In that case get a second drive and bring copies. If your data is that important, protect it. 8) Think of the stupidest person at your job and assume that every review is written by them. Seriously, I've known professional techs I wouldn't trust to plug in a keyboard. Some of them made a lot of money. I have DECADES of tech experience. I also have a bunch of educational and professional credentials. Of course, I may also be a small pink bunny. You don't know. Don't listen to people on the internet, including me. Look for respected technical sites (I don't think I'm allowed to list any here) and find consensus. Ask what the worst outcome is if the writer is a moron or troll. 9) When checking the reviews, check what the 1-star reviews say. Are they bitter or factual? Drives fail? Did the company treat them well? Are they actually complaining about Amazon or a 3rd party seller? 9b) 12% of the reviews here are 1-star. A quick survey shows me at least half of them are by people that don't know as much about computers as their friends tell them they do. Half of the rest are actually complaining about other stuff. Toshiba's return policies look like they could use some work though, so use your 30-days to burn it in and back it up. TLDR I've been using The Toshiba Canvio line since it came out and I still have and use my original drive. I've used them professionally, as have people I know in a variety of fields. I've personally owned at least 6 and known many others with them. In all that time I've had exactly one problem (see below). When asked for my professional recommendation, it's my go to. Lately, I've been looking for a higher capacity drive (Macs and laptops are port-deprived), but I keep coming back here. UPDATE: I had my first problem, an old 1TB I've had so long I can't find a record of when I bought it. The light was on but the system didn't even know it was there. The fix? I pried open the case and unplugged the sliver of electronics connecting the internal drive's connector (SATA) to the outside socket (USB-B). Then I plugged it back in and reassembled the drive. FWIW, it's called reseating. It works on anything with a cord and ranks up there with restarting the system for magical fixes. BONUS: No guarantees, but if that sliver of electronics is bad, you may be able to access the drive inside with a new housing or SATA to USB adapter kit. I think I paid around $40 for mine. Opening the case carefully is probably more difficult than using the gear, but there are a number of reputable forums where you can get help using it. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 9, 2019 by A. User

  • Don't put any files you don't want to lose on this unit
Color: Black Capacity: 2TB Style: Backup
Purchased March 9 - loaded it up with documents to take with me for a month long trip in April so I could work on my laptop with files saved from my desktop PC. The drive stopped working when it was only 30 days old on April 9. Apparently this is a common issue for this unit because when I Googled how to fix it there were hundreds of pages on the subject. I'm now back in my office and was hoping that when I plugged it in to the desktop PC it might suddenly begin working - that maybe the issue was with my laptop port - no such luck - the lights don't even come on and I cannot access the files at all or even follow some of the fixes, like: rename the drive letter, reinstall the o/s, reformat the drive. And, oh by the way, the last return date was April 9! The same day it stopped working! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 4, 2018 by M. Murphy

  • DO NOT BUY AT ALL COSTS
Color: Red Capacity: 2TB Style: Backup
The media could not be loaded. UPDATE: The drive was less than 2 weeks old and was never transported when it went faulty. Thousands of files are gone and unrecoverable even after extensive $ spent on specialized recovery. No help or contact from Toshiba whatsoever, overall a cheap and useless product. Had 4-5 WD drives over years that never went faulty, unless you simply don’t care about your data DO NOT purchase one of Toshibas drives. I will never support them or a single product they produce again. Making a very very strange clicking sound and is not letting me move files to another drive. I have 4 paying clients work on this that is currently in limbo. May be recovered, may not, but not something that should ever have to be worried about with one of these drives. Get yourself a WD and don’t go through this stress. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on October 15, 2018 by Amazon Customer

  • Great for my MacBook.
Color: Blue Capacity: 1TB Style: Backup
I purchased this to backup my MacBook. The description didn't say much about being used as a backup for Macs, but I decided to purchase it anyways. I plugged it in and the MacBook automatically formatted it and started the backup process. I am very impressed how fast it backed up my computer. It's also nice and small. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 18, 2018 by Jutsinger

  • External hard drive for use on PS4
Color: Black Capacity: 2TB Style: Backup
I bought this 2TB external hard drive for my PS4. My 500 GB PS4 was out of available space, and this device worked perfectly! When I connected the USB, the system asked if wanted to format the drive for use on the PS4. I clicked YES, and it was ready to use. I was able to immediately start moving saved data from the PS4 to the external hard drive. Now, I have all the free space I need. The Playstation branded external hard drive was priced at nearly $30 more, so it would have been a waste of money. This Toshiba drive does exactly what I needed it to do, and I saved money at the same time. If you're looking for extra storage space for your PS4, look no further. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 4, 2020 by Chris

  • Garbage
Sorry to give a negative review - I prefer to give good reviews, which I do almost always, but this piece of junk, within 4 months, stopped working. I tried numerous fixes posted by exceptional companies like Easeus; unsuccessful. This Toshiba Canvio Advance 2TB is worthless and a waste of my money. Calling this "Amazon's Choice" is a sick joke. Almost 5 stars? It deserves less than a one star; it deserves minus stars. BTW, I use numerous external hard drives for storage. I use a different, older Toshiba and it's okay. I use WD, I use Seagate, I use Fantom; never a problem. Seagate and Fantom are very good. WD external hard drives are especially excellent. Reliable. I purchased this Toshiba Canvio Advance 2TB in SEP 2018 and by the time the drive failed, the company had closed me off from support, etc. I'm replacing this with a WD that I can trust. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 28, 2019 by mmm

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