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Today, a new memo from Xbox CEO Asha Sharma emerged.
News emerged today revealing some hints at the current thinking of Xbox, as we head ever faster towards the Xbox Showcase on June 7. There are some positive notes, but also some troubling ones.
Xbox is in a bind, in multiple directions. The dilution of attention is affecting the video game industry across the board, with competition from social media brainrot eating into traditional gaming hours and spend. Consumer sentiment is also at a big low right now, and AI hyperscalers have destroyed the memory market. The Steam Deck’s massive price jump and recent uncompetitive Surface prices underpin the problems facing all of consumer tech right now.
Xbox also has some existential problems. Xbox fans are clamoring for exclusive games, but games are where margins are the strongest for Xbox. Selling games on other platforms, in particular, notably PlayStation and Steam, where Xbox has bled a lot of its core audience over the past couple of generations.
New Xbox CEO Asha Sharma has signaled that changes are needed … she’ll have a huge balancing act to follow up.
In a memo seen by The Verge and verified by Windows Central (as if you needed it), Asha Sharma added some context to Xbox’s current trajectory.
“We are building a stronger XBOX. That means making hard choices about what we build, where we invest, and what kind of company we need to be going forward, that is part of what you are starting to see in the shift from Xbox to XBOX. It reflects a decision to be deliberate in how we show up for the players who care most about this brand.”
Sharma also poured scorn on previous decisions Xbox had made with regards to Xbox Game Pass, which she said hurt subscriptions and battered retention. She noted that last month’s Xbox Game Pass Ultimate price cut had started to reverse those negative trends.
But what of these “tough decisions?” It could represent some painful pills for Xbox fans in the short term. Here are some of my initial reactions to comments and questions I’ve had on socials and beyond.
Microsoft won’t let Xbox run itself as a loss leader, even if memory prices are expected to stabilize in 2028. Microsoft positioned Xbox poorly after its Activision-Blizzard acquisition, assuming Call of Duty would immediately solve all of its problems. Clearly that didn’t pan out … and Microsoft, given that they are one of the hyperscalers, probably should’ve seen the memory apocalypse coming.
Xbox has set itself up for a very tough couple of years. Its problems aren’t in a vacuum. It’s not as if there’s no desire for Xbox hardware; it’s the simple fact that Xbox can’t get the volume necessary to keep prices reasonable. I suspect we’ll see further Xbox Series X|S (and others) price increases before the year ends, as memory contracts end and have to be renewed.
But there is no time machine. Xbox can only move forward, much like any of us. Microsoft absolutely needs to be generous with Xbox here, though, given that a lot of Xbox’s mistakes are ultimately Microsoft’s mistakes. The “30 by 30” margin accountability demands of the post-acquisition era have needlessly put the Xbox platform into a position of weakness. Xbox needs to deliver on what fans are asking for, while simultaneously steering through a very strange economy. Wherever the burden ends up falling, it’ll be a painful moment.
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