25 bucks a month for 24 months for a (mostly) next gen console that includes Game Pass, EA Play, and X Cloud that lets you play all of those games on iDevices; 35 bucks a month for the top of the line 4K version of that. Sony is fighting the last war and doing a great job; all the exclusives are going to be on PS5. Microsoft, though, has long had to serve two markets: PC and consoles. They have also made the move to "X" as a Service a long time ago.
Microsoft suffered terribly at the hands of the "Living Room" delusion that Sony also bought into a generation earlier with the PS3. XBO was intended to be all things Media Center and controller-less with the Connect, which was compelling in the age of DDR but as the console Primer Mover was a Fad at the end of a Generation and not a unit mover at the beginning ala Wii Sports. Sony recovered from the PS3 debacle strong and thus PS4 was focused and great. It wasn't until 3 years later that MS course corrected with the X/S mid-gen refresh and began to catch back up.
I think that the reason no one released pricing is that Sony was going to go 599 and 499 for their units and the lower pricing is going to take longer for them to make money. As stated above, each side is actually playing a completely different game: Sony is playing the old game and seemed to be winning, and Microsoft is now fully revealed to be playing a completely different game, and also appears to be winning depending on one's point of view. It remains to be seen which one consumers prefer and which one is actually more profitable.