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

Starfield isn’t going multiplatform, but 4 Xbox games are

Add as a preferred source on Google
Key art for Starfield
Bethesda Game Studios

Microsoft finally gave its fans an update on the future of its gaming business during the Official Xbox Podcast today. It clarified some of the speculation around its first-party games going multiplatform, explaining that this move only applies to four titles.

“We made the decision that we’re going to take four games to the other consoles. Just four games, not a change to our kind of fundamental exclusive strategy.” Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer said. “We’re making these decisions for some specific reasons. We make every decision with the long-term health of Xbox in mind, and long-term health of Xbox means a growing platform, our games performing, building the best platform for creators, reaching as many players as we can.”

Updates on the Xbox Business | Official Xbox Podcast

Phil Spencer refused to name the four games going multiplatform, though, because “the teams that are building those games have announced plans that are not too far away.” Still, he confirmed that Starfield and Indiana Jones and the Great Circle aren’t part of that lineup, which will contain a mix of live-service titles and “smaller games that were never really meant to be built as platform exclusives.” Ultimately, his point was that Xbox fans should not take this move “as some signal that everything is coming” to other platforms.

Recommended Videos

To reinforce the idea it wants to make its games as widely available as possible, even if it’s just on Microsoft-made platforms, Xbox President Sarah Bond confirmed that Microsoft will start bringing Activision Blizzard games to Xbox Game Pass. The first title will be Diablo IV on March 28.

Microsoft has not confirmed the names or release dates of the four first-party titles going multiplatform at this time.

Tomas Franzese
Former Digital Trends Contributor
A former Gaming Staff Writer at Digital Trends, Tomas Franzese now reports on and reviews the latest releases and exciting…
Corsair fitted the Elgato Stream Deck’s soul into a hotkey on its Nightsword v2 mouse
Stream Deck macros, Discord controls, and app shortcuts move to the mouse
Corsair NIGHTSWORD v2 Wireless Stream Deck gaming mouse side view

Corsair has launched the Nightsword v2 Wireless SD Stream Deck gaming mouse, a right-handed wireless mouse with a dedicated Stream Deck launch button, at Computex 2026.

The Stream Deck support is an in-house integration rather than a third-party collaboration, since Corsair owns Elgato. It brings Elgato’s shortcut system directly to the mouse, letting gamers, streamers, and creators trigger app, gaming, and workflow controls without reaching for a separate desktop panel.

Read more
Nvidia confirms more RTX Spark processors are coming with N2X and N3 series lined up
Huang confirming a multi-generation roadmap before the first device has even shipped is the clearest signal yet that this is a decade-long commitment.
nvidia-rtx-spark

The PC and laptop industry has run on Intel and AMD silicon so long that most people don’t even question whether these are the only options. 

Nvidia just answered that question at Computex 2026, in the form of the RTX Spark superchip, and Jensen Huang’s comments about what comes next suggest that it wasn’t a one-time experiment. 

Read more
Nintendo is redesigning the Switch 2 so you can replace the battery yourself
An EU regulation taking effect in 2027 requires portable game consoles to support user-replaceable batteries, and Nintendo is already preparing a compliant version of the Switch 2.
Nintendo Switch 2

Nintendo plans to release a modified Switch 2 in Europe that will let you swap out the battery without sending the console in for service. The move is a direct response to a new EU regulation set to take effect in February 2027, which requires portable electronics, including game consoles, to support user-replaceable batteries.

Why this is a bigger deal than it sounds

Read more