Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

Is the Xbox ending? Don’t count on it yet

Microsoft’s shift toward services and AI may look scary, but it is far from the end.

Add as a preferred source on Google
The Xbox logo from Xbox Games Showcase 2024
Microsoft

A dramatic prediction about the future of Xbox has been making the rounds online, claiming the brand could slowly fade away following recent leadership changes. The comments came from Seamus Blackley, often called the father of the original Xbox, who suggested the new leadership could act as a “palliative care doctor” guiding the brand toward a quieter sunset, in an interview with GamesBeat.

And that is not the only grim take circulating right now. Wedbush Securities analyst Michael Pachter recently claimed the next Xbox console is already dead, arguing that Microsoft “blew it by embracing Game Pass,” especially after price increases and a strategy that prioritises subscriptions over hardware.

Recommended Videos

To be fair to the sceptics, the concern is not appearing out of thin air. Microsoft’s Q2 2026 earnings revealed a sharp 32% year over year drop in Xbox hardware revenue alongside an overall 9% decline in gaming revenue. Add Phil Spencer’s retirement, Sarah Bond’s unexpected resignation, and the strategy of bringing Xbox exclusives to rival consoles, and it becomes easier to see why doom-and-gloom narratives are gaining traction.

But when you look at what the new leadership is actually saying, the picture feels less like a shutdown and more like a major course correction.

A course correction, not a quiet sunset

The previous “every screen is an Xbox” strategy focused heavily on Game Pass and cloud gaming rather than hardware. While ambitious, it arguably distanced the brand from its core console audience and contributed to the recent hardware slump. The new leadership appears determined to fix that.

Microsoft recently appointed Asha Sharma, a former Instacart and Meta executive with a strong AI background, as CEO of Microsoft Gaming. Some fear this signals a shift toward AI-driven content, but Sharma’s early messaging suggests the opposite. She has publicly emphasised a renewed commitment to core players, saying she wants to “return to Xbox, and that starts with console, that starts with hardware.” She also addressed AI concerns directly, promising the company will not chase short-term efficiency or flood the ecosystem with what she called “soulless AI slop.”

Additionally, quietly winding down Xbox would also make little business sense. Microsoft owns a massive portfolio of first-party studios, including Bethesda and Activision Blizzard, representing tens of billions in investment. Game Pass remains a central pillar of recurring revenue, and Chief Content Officer Matt Booty has reaffirmed the company’s commitment to first-party development. Dedicated hardware and a loyal player base still anchor those investments.

The idea that Xbox is ending makes for a catchy headline, but the evidence points elsewhere. Xbox is not disappearing. It is just hitting the brakes on a strategy that was not working and trying to win back its core audience. If anything, the next few years will likely show Microsoft fighting to redefine its hardware legacy rather than quietly stepping away from it.

Varun Mirchandani
Varun is an experienced technology journalist and editor with over eight years in consumer tech media. His work spans…
Sony’s wild PSN login patent could turn the DualSense into a security gatekeeper
A newly published filing outlines controller-based sign-ins for PlayStation users, aiming to make stolen accounts harder to exploit.
Geoff Keighley holding DualSense.

Sony has filed a PSN login patent, first spotted by RespawnFirst, that would pull the DualSense controller into the sign-in process. A PlayStation console would start the request, then the controller would help confirm that the account holder is close enough to approve access.

For players, the appeal is easy to see. PSN account abuse can lead to unauthorized purchases, lost access, and attempts to resell established accounts. Sony already offers 2-step verification and passkeys, but this idea adds a hardware check to the login chain.

Read more
This study found a surprising mental health perk hiding in your game library
Researchers surveyed 2,252 adults and found that specific game genres, not gaming in general, line up with lower loneliness and stronger emotional resilience.
Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild official artwork

A new study has found that adults who play certain video games report feeling less lonely and more emotionally resilient than people who don't play games at all. The findings challenge the idea that gaming is just a way to escape from real life and instead tie specific kinds of games to real, measurable shifts in how people cope with stress and isolation.

What the study found

Read more
GTA 6 may be far away, so Rockstar gave GTA 5 a fresh coat of paint
Grand Theft Auto 5

With Grand Theft Auto 6 now just months away, Rockstar Games is giving longtime Grand Theft Auto 5 players a reason to revisit Los Santos. The company has announced that owners of the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One versions of GTA 5 will receive a free upgrade to the PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X/S versions of the game.

The move comes as Rockstar ramps up excitement for GTA 6, which is currently scheduled to launch on November 19 for PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series consoles. Previously, upgrading from the older console versions to the current-generation release required a separate purchase, typically costing around $10. Beginning Thursday, however, eligible players will be able to move to the newer version at no additional cost.

Read more