TRENDING NEWS
Back to news
08 Jul, 2025
Share:
Xbox bet that Game Pass would be the future of gaming, and we're all paying for it
@Source: pcgamer.com
Skip to main content PC Gamer THE GLOBAL AUTHORITY ON PC GAMES Search PC Gamer View Profile PC Gaming Show Movies & TV Community guidelines Affiliate links Meet the team About PC Gamer PC Gamer Magazine Subscription Why subscribe? Subscribe to the world's #1 PC gaming mag Try a single issue or save on a subscription Issues delivered straight to your door or device From$32.49View Amazon Prime Day Deals Essential Hardware PC Gaming Show Dune: Awakening Recommended reading Gaming Industry 'There has to be a better way than this': Game developers call Microsoft's latest layoffs 'a colossal waste of talent' from a publisher that seems like it's in 'a death spiral' Gaming Industry 'Game Pass is an unsustainable model': Arkane founder slams Microsoft for its Game Pass focus after mass layoffs Gaming Industry Before cancelling ZeniMax's Destiny-style MMO shooter, Xbox executives reportedly enjoyed early demos so much that the controller had to be pulled from Phil Spencer's hands Gaming Industry Phil Spencer says Microsoft's gaming business has 'never looked stronger' as the company announces yet another round of mass layoffs Gaming Industry CWA union derides Microsoft layoffs when ‘the company is prospering’: 'We are living through a moment of profound corporate consolidation and disruption' Gaming Industry PC gaming can't stop getting Ws, as Microsoft shares it's being weighed down by console and hardware revenue woes Gaming Industry Fallout and Skyrim show us that talented developers make great games when you leave them alone Gaming Industry Xbox bet that Game Pass would be the future of gaming, and we're all paying for it Ted Litchfield 7 July 2025 There's triage, and then there's this. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. (Image credit: Getty Images) By all appearances, 2025 was going to be the year Xbox turned things around. Doom: The Dark Ages, no less than three new games from Obsidian Entertainment, Indiana Jones on PS5, another post-acquisition Call of Duty, and the absolute whopper of The Elder Scrolls 4: Oblivion Remastered. After two years of mass layoffs and studio closures, it seemed like things had calmed down. Nope: Last week's layoffs of 9,100 people company-wide at Microsoft, with a chunk of those at Xbox, joined the layoffs of 6,000 employees in May. With the 10,000 laid off at the beginning of 2023 and 2,500 after the Activision Blizzard acquisition went through last year, that's 27,600 lives upended by Microsoft in two and a half years. Some obvious questions arise from this destructiveness. Why did Microsoft gobble up so many studios only to cancel their apparently promising games, like the Blizzard survival game that employees were hyped about, or the ZeniMax MMO that even Microsoft Gaming head Phil Spencer himself reportedly liked? And why should the employees of a company making billions in profit have to be in constant fear that they're next on the chopping block? Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella's executive compensation rose 63% in 2024 to $79 million. Related articles 'There has to be a better way than this': Game developers call Microsoft's latest layoffs 'a colossal waste of talent' from a publisher that seems like it's in 'a death spiral' 'Game Pass is an unsustainable model': Arkane founder slams Microsoft for its Game Pass focus after mass layoffs Before cancelling ZeniMax's Destiny-style MMO shooter, Xbox executives reportedly enjoyed early demos so much that the controller had to be pulled from Phil Spencer's hands Spencer's justification is that "tough decisions" like these are why Microsoft is profitable in the first place, but the company seems to be on track to "tough decision" its entire gaming workforce into oblivion. And Xbox's mercurial nature has ramifications even outside its walls. Gaming legends John and Brenda Romero have had to lay off most of their staff and scramble for an alternate publisher after Microsoft pulled funding for their FPS project, which was apparently quite far along in development. After so much talk about its commitment to gaming, it feels clear now that Xbox is just a side project for the mammoth corporation, which would prefer to bet billions on AI so it doesn't lose clients like the Israeli military (however many employees protest its involvement in the massacre of Gazans, which has also landed it on the BDS embargo list). Xbox - This Is an Xbox - YouTube But that doesn't entirely explain why Microsoft is cancelling games and laying off dev teams at the same time as it's boasting about having "more players, games, and gaming hours than ever before." Our best hypothesis for that apparent contradiction: Microsoft's acquisitions were all about feeding Game Pass, and as successful as the subscription service has been, it hasn't turned out to be the gold mine it hoped for. According to discovery documents during the FTC's challenge to the Activision Blizzard merger, Microsoft had a goal of over 100 million Game Pass subscribers by 2030. Game Pass currently boasts north of 35 million subscribers after eight years of existence⁠, with five more to go until the 2030 deadline. If that initial goal still stands, we can probably expect many more mass layoffs in the future. The biggest gaming news, reviews and hardware deals Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team. Contact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsorsBy submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over. This Is An Xbox Having handily lost the last two console generations to Sony and Nintendo, Xbox has become associated with services more than games. Xbox hedged its bet in the console hardware space in 2017 with the introduction of Game Pass, its subscription game service, and possibly the closest thing we have to the much-ballyhooed "Netflix of Games." Game Pass is undeniably a convenient, economical way for players to access a large catalogue of games, and the service saw rapid adoption. Intuitively, though, it's another force (like Steam sales) driving down the perceived value of games, and Game Pass uniquely harms their retail success⁠—would you rather buy Avowed for $70, or get it through PC Game Pass for $12/month? Arkane founder Raphaël Colantonio had harsh words for Microsoft's all-in bet on Game Pass. "I think Gamepass is an unsustainable model that has been increasingly damaging the industry for a decade, subsidized by [Microsoft's] 'infinite money,'" Colantonio wrote. "But at some point reality has to hit. I don't think GP can co-exist with other models, they'll either kill everyone else, or give up." Best of the best (Image credit: Larian Studios) 2025 games: Upcoming releases Best PC games: All-time favorites Free PC games: Freebie fest Best FPS games: Finest gunplay Best RPGs: Grand adventures Best co-op games: Better together The math works if Microsoft keeps getting new Game Pass subscribers, who are enticed to the service with the constant addition of new games. And from the outside, it does appear to be working—Windows Central reported in April that PC Game Pass revenue was up 45%—but Microsoft apparently wants more. Something is clearly very wrong if success continues to result in these mass layoffs, studio closures, and project cancellations. What's especially worrying is that this should have been a particularly great year for the service, the likes it may not see again for some time, buoyed as it was by the first post-merger Call of Duty on Game Pass. I have my doubts that even an Infinity Ward entry will cause a similar stir, The Elder Scrolls 6 ain't walking through that door anytime soon, and Xbox has committed to starving itself of fuel for the Game Pass engine with every layoff and studio closure. The enduring legacy of Xbox's explosive late '10s and early '20s expansion, buying up so many beloved studios, appears to be a massive injection of misery into gaming as an industry and hobby. While Microsoft's new "This is an Xbox" campaign highlights the hardware-agnostic nature of its services and seems another indication of a pivot away from traditional console manufacturing, Xbox does not appear to be fully exiting the hardware business. But the rumors are that its next generation console will be a PC in all but name, running a specialized version of Windows⁠—the ROG Ally X appears to be a first stab at the concept. This strikes me as a stage-managed retreat into making Potemkin consoles that are just PCs with walled garden software, the logical conclusion to the past ten years of consoles transforming into worse PCs. I don't see products like the Ally X making a significant dent in the well-established market of pre-built and handheld PCs. Just like with Games for Windows Live, Microsoft is at least five years too late and playing catch-up. It's hard to imagine where we go from here, but Xbox is still leveraged across dozens of studios, and if it keeps firing its devs and shutting them down, I foresee a negative feedback loop where Game Pass will have fewer new releases to keep people subscribed between CoDs and Elder Scrolls, while its corresponding slowed growth will feed into yet more layoffs. Ted Litchfield Social Links Navigation Associate Editor Ted has been thinking about PC games and bothering anyone who would listen with his thoughts on them ever since he booted up his sister's copy of Neverwinter Nights on the family computer. He is obsessed with all things CRPG and CRPG-adjacent, but has also covered esports, modding, and rare game collecting. When he's not playing or writing about games, you can find Ted lifting weights on his back porch. You must confirm your public display name before commenting Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name. 'There has to be a better way than this': Game developers call Microsoft's latest layoffs 'a colossal waste of talent' from a publisher that seems like it's in 'a death spiral' 'Game Pass is an unsustainable model': Arkane founder slams Microsoft for its Game Pass focus after mass layoffs Before cancelling ZeniMax's Destiny-style MMO shooter, Xbox executives reportedly enjoyed early demos so much that the controller had to be pulled from Phil Spencer's hands Phil Spencer says Microsoft's gaming business has 'never looked stronger' as the company announces yet another round of mass layoffs CWA union derides Microsoft layoffs when ‘the company is prospering’: 'We are living through a moment of profound corporate consolidation and disruption' PC gaming can't stop getting Ws, as Microsoft shares it's being weighed down by console and hardware revenue woes Latest in Gaming Industry EA Japan exec laments Microsoft's crushing layoffs, and the demands shareholders make for 'short-term results from large-scale investments' Summer Games Done Quick 2025 is now live—kicking off a full week of speedruns and goofs to raise money for Doctors Without Borders At the request of South Korea, Valve pulled a mod from Steam that glorified the country's military dictatorship 'Game Pass is an unsustainable model': Arkane founder slams Microsoft for its Game Pass focus after mass layoffs European game publisher group responds to Stop Killing Games, claims the proposal 'would curtail developer choice' In the wake of Perfect Dark's cancellation, Joanna Dark's voice actor urges fans to help save the series: 'Agent Dark doesn’t give up and neither should any of you' Latest in Features What happened to the creator of Gunman Chronicles, Valve's forgotten FPS? 'My relationship with Gabe didn't really go that great' Can you guess gaming's weirdest currencies in our latest quiz? Phoenix's terrifying team-up in Marvel Rivals Season 3 has me starting a campaign to get Wolverine banned in all my matches I played 10 free Steam demos this week: here are the 5 games that made it onto my wishlist Out of the blue: How a Quake blog turned PC gaming news site has stayed a haven from 'internet enshittification' for nearly 30 years 20 foolproof ways to get laid off in the videogame industry HARDWARE BUYING GUIDES LATEST GAME REVIEWS Best graphics cards in 2025: I've tested pretty much every AMD and Nvidia GPU of the past 20 years and these are today's top cards Best gaming laptop in 2025: I've put the best of this new generation head-to-head and we have a winner Best gaming chair in 2025: I've tested a ton of gaming chairs and these are the seats I'd suggest for any PC gamer Best Steam Deck accessories in Australia for 2025: Our favorite docks, powerbanks and gamepads Best graphics card for laptops in 2025: the mobile GPUs I'd want in my next gaming laptop NZXT N7 Z890 review NZXT N9 X870E review NZXT N9 Z890 review Sennheiser Momentum True Wireless 4 review Razer Joro & Basilisk Mobile review PC Gamer is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site. Contact Future's experts Terms and conditions Privacy policy Cookies policy Advertise with us Accessibility Statement Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, Please login or signup to comment Please wait...
For advertisement: 510-931-9107
Copyright © 2025 Usfijitimes. All Rights Reserved.