Xbox One is nearing end-of-life, but Microsoft’s big bet on ecosystem-over-console is working well.
The United States’ ongoing tariff war with China could have serious repercussions for the gaming and tech industries. If manufacturing vacates China, it’s likely that this will result in higher prices for consumers.
The affected positions appear to be at Inside Xbox and Mixer with heavy implications that Microsoft is moving away from internal original content creation.
At Casual Connect London, Guy Richards from ID@Xbox outlined a number of key learnings for indies.
The GameDaily staff gathers ’round to discuss the highlights of this year’s E3 Expo and some of the more notable trends coming out of the show. (Photo: AFP/Christian Petersen)
It’s a smart move but it does mean that Microsoft will no longer be adding to the backwards compatibility list for Xbox One.
Microsoft didn’t pull any punches at E3 this year, rolling out dozens of games for Xbox Game Pass while growing its studio system and preparing for next-gen.
Jim Ryan categorically rules out merger, but could a situation exist where both could come together? We ask analysts to answer the question.
Further tapping into the cloud, Microsoft continues to evolve the Xbox brand beyond hardware.
Added costs could cripple the tabletop industry and impair the next console hardware cycle.