Microsoft is all but declaring “Game Over” on Xbox.
Xbox CEO Asha Sharma announced plans to eliminate about 20% of the gaming console’s staff by the end of fiscal 2027, starting with 1,600 Xbox employees who got the pink slip yesterday. Across Microsoft, 3,200 total jobs were eliminated, with 6,400 total planned, or about 3% of the wider company.
The layoffs are part of a massive restructuring meant to reset Microsoft’s struggling gaming biz. The company will also sell off four game-making studios and consider parting ways with a fifth.
Sharma took the Player 1 controller as Xbox’s CEO in February and has already decided the company needs a hard reset. She wrote in a memo last month that annual revenue fell by half a billion dollars over the past five years despite the company pouring in $20 billion. Microsoft also spent a whopping $69 billion acquiring “Call of Duty” publisher Activision Blizzard in 2023.
Xbox’s problems aren’t a new game. It has been losing the console wars to competitors Sony and Nintendo, whose PlayStation 5 and Switch 2 have dominated.
While rivals captured more playtime from Xbox over the years, AI simultaneously ramped up the difficulty mode:
Low Score: Xbox had already shifted its priorities away from physical consoles and toward its gaming subscription service Game Pass, which has less than half the subscribers the company had targeted this year. Under previous CEO Phil Spencer, Xbox scooped up smaller studios to create games for Game Pass and compete with indie titles known for low costs and high returns … when they’re hits. Sharma said it’s not possible to compete with indie studios and major game publishers at the same time and Xbox will instead focus on the latter. Mojang and King, the businesses behind “Minecraft” and “Candy Crush,” will report to Sharma.
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