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Microsoft Gaming CEO resigns, putting former head of its ...

Phil Spencer is leaving Microsoft after more than a decade of Xbox management, putting CoreAIs Asha Sharma in charge of Microsoft G...

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Microsoft Gaming CEO resigns, putting former head of its ...
Source: AV Club

What’s Happening

Breaking it down: Phil Spencer is leaving Microsoft after more than a decade of Xbox management, putting CoreAIs Asha Sharma in charge of Microsoft Gaming.

Microsoft Gaming CEO resigns, putting former head of its AI team in charge Phil Spencer is leaving Microsoft after more than a decade of Xbox management, putting CoreAI’s Asha Sharma in charge of Microsoft Gaming. William Hughes — By William Hughes | | 10:32pm Games News Microsoft Copy to clipboard × Copy Link Copy Link — Facebook X Reddit Bluesky Email — 0 Its been a pretty tumultuous week in the world of gaming, with news of more studio closures cropping up nearly every day. (yes, really)

But theres been nothing quite so seismic as the news that broke today ( per Polygon ), when Phil Spencer, the Microsoft Gaming CEO whos been part of the companys gaming efforts since the launch of the original Xbox back in 2001, just dropped that he was resigning.

The Details

Maybe just as shockingly, Spencer just dropped that he would not be handing his seat over to Sarah Bond, president of the companys Xbox division, and long viewed as his natural successor; instead, the head of the companys gaming efforts will be Asha Sharma, who up until today was the head of the corporations CoreAI team. This does not (probably) mean that Microsoft will now be ASAP pivoting its gaming efforts to AI, with Sharma giving an Everybody please calm down interview to Variety where she tried to emphasize that solid stories are created by humans.

(She also dropped a written statement in which she pledged to not chase short-term efficiency or flood our ecosystem with soulless AI slop, using a term that Microsofts AI-obsessed CEO, Satya Nidella, has bristled at in the past . ) That being dropped, choosing an AI head whos only been with Microsoft since 2024—instead of Bond, whos also reportedly leaving, and whos been part of the companys gaming team since 2017—does feel hard not to read as a shift in priorities.

Why This Matters

Microsofts gaming division has had a fairly rough time of it in recent years, despite successes like its subscription gaming service Game Pass, and a number of high-profile acquisitions.

The entertainment world moves fast, and this is a prime example.

The Bottom Line

This story is still developing, and we’ll keep you updated as more info drops.

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