Xboxâs CEO has scrapped Microsoftâs AI chatbot companion for consoles, while filling her leadership team with former CoreAI colleagues.
Thereâs been a flurry of notable Xbox announcements since Asha Sharma became the companyâs new CEO, including confirmation of Microsoftâs next console, codenamed Project Helix, and a price drop for Xbox Game Pass.
There have been other changes too, like ditching the much maligned âThis Is An Xboxâ marketing campaign, as the company tries to bounce back from the failure of the Xbox Series X/S.
Now, Sharma has announced another wave of changes, this time related to Microsoftâs Copilot AI assistant and her new leadership team.
In a post on X, Sharma said she wants to âaddress frictionâ between players and developers and âmove fasterâ as a company. As part of this, Xbox is scrapping plans to bring Copilot to console, while âwinding downâ its functionality on mobile.
âXbox needs to move faster, deepen our connection with the community, and address friction for both players and developers,â a post on X reads. âToday, we promoted leaders who helped build Xbox, while also bringing in new voices to help push us forward. This balance is important as we get the business back on track.
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âAs part of this shift, youâll see us begin to retire features that donât align with where weâre headed. We will begin winding down Copilot on mobile and will stop development of Copilot on console.â
Microsoft has been talking about utilising Copilot in games for years. In 2024, the company released a demo of how the tech could be integrated into Minecraft, where it gave a player advice on how to make a sword and what materials they would require. In other words, it acts as an in-game guide if players are stuck on what to do next.
In March, Microsoft debuted footage of Copilot being used to assist players in Forza Horizon 5, stating it would be released on Xbox Series X/S later this year. However, after this new announcement, thatâs presumably no longer happening.
While you could interpret this as a pivot away from AI, Sharmaâs newly promoted leaders are cause for concern. According to The Verge, a number of Sharmaâs former colleagues within Microsoftâs CoreAI division have been assigned to new roles within Xbox.
This includes Jared Palmer, who is joining Xbox as vice president of engineering and as a technical adviser to Sharma. Additionally, Tim Allen, former Microsoft CoreAI VP of design and GitHubâs senior VP of design and research, is joining Xbox to lead design.
Other former CoreAI employees joining Xbox include Jonathan McKay, who will take charge of growth, data platform, and analytics in his new role, while Evan Chaki â formerly a general manager at CoreAI â will lead a new engineering team within Xbox âfocused on removing repetitive work, simplifying development, and improving how we operate,â according to an internal memo.
These changes include some departing Xbox veterans. Roanne Sones, corporate vice president of Xbox devices and ecosystem, is taking a âleave of absence after this summerâ but will remain on as an advisor. Meanwhile, Kevin Gammill, corporate vice president of Xbox user experience, is stepping down after nearly 20 years at Microsoft.
The last change is Jason Ronald, vice president of next gen, who has been promoted to an unspecified new role, although itâll still be strongly connected to Project Helix.
Nepotism may not be the only problem here, as Sharma previously stated she is ârefocusingâ Xboxâs AI efforts, not abandoning the technology as a whole. Thereâs also the fact that with Windows apps such as Notepad, Microsoft has made a show of removing Copilot but in reality it just replaced it with a range of other AI tools with less obvious names.
On the surface at least it still seems like positive news, but the big question for Xboxâs use of AI is how itâll be used in Project Helix â about which we still know nothing.
Still, itâs clear Xbox desperately needs a shake-up, and while we probably wonât feel the effects of these changes for some time, itâs an indication that the status quo is changing signficantly.
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