The "Microsoft Gaming" era is officially over. In a company-wide memo titled "We Are Xbox" sent to employees on April 23, new CEO Asha Sharma and executive vice president Matt Booty announced that Microsoft's gaming division will once again operate under the Xbox brand. It is a pointed reversal of the organizational restructuring that has defined the division since the Activision Blizzard acquisition closed in late 2023.
"Microsoft Gaming describes our structure but it does not describe our ambition," Sharma and Booty wrote in the memo. In an internal town hall that same day, Sharma reportedly put it even more plainly: "Xbox needs to be our identity." The message, which was subsequently published on Xbox Wire, is the clearest signal yet that Sharma's leadership represents a meaningful departure from the Phil Spencer era, not just a changing of the guard.
Four Priorities, One Brand
The memo lays out four strategic pillars that will guide Xbox over the coming years. First is hardware: Sharma commits to stabilizing the current generation of consoles while continuing development on "Project Helix," the next-generation Xbox hardware initiative. Internal Project Helix materials reportedly showcase a refreshed Xbox logo, trading the current flat design for a glass-like finish, suggesting the visual rebrand will extend well beyond internal memos.
Second is content. Xbox will focus on growing its existing franchises while strengthening third-party partnerships. The memo mentions expansion into China and mobile markets, two areas where Xbox has historically lagged behind Sony and Nintendo. Minecraft and The Elder Scrolls are highlighted as "creator platforms" to be elevated further, and live-service games remain a priority.
Third, experience. Sharma acknowledges head-on that players are frustrated with the Xbox platform itself, citing "infrequent console feature updates," a "weak PC presence," and "fragmented core experiences" around search, discovery, and social features. The commitment includes cross-platform progression across console, PC, mobile, and cloud, framed not as a new initiative but as an overdue correction.
The fourth pillar is services, with Game Pass front and center. The memo pledges to "strengthen Game Pass economics" with clearer tier differentiation, expand cloud gaming to TVs and lower-cost hardware, and improve pricing flexibility and affordability. A new "north star" metric sits underneath all four pillars: daily active players, a significant shift away from console sales or subscription numbers as the primary measure of success.
Why the Rebrand Matters
The "Microsoft Gaming" umbrella was introduced to separate the Xbox brand from specific hardware and support a platform-agnostic approach centered on cloud gaming and mobile. Campaigns like "Everything is an Xbox" and "This is an Xbox" tried to position any screen as a potential Xbox, but the strategy met resistance from players and, reportedly, from within Microsoft itself. Hardware revenue continued to decline and the brand identity grew muddied in a market where PlayStation and Nintendo maintained sharp, recognizable identities.
Sharma's appointment followed the departures of both Phil Spencer and his expected successor Sarah Bond earlier this year. As a relative newcomer to the gaming division, Sharma is unencumbered by the decisions that led to the current brand confusion. Leadership is also reframing the team's mindset: internal communications describe Xbox as a "challenger" requiring "pace, energy, and self-critique that should feel uncomfortable." The rebrand is her first major public move, and it carries a simple message: Xbox is a gaming brand, not a corporate division.
Exclusivity, Windowing, and AI
Perhaps the most closely watched line in the memo is the pledge to "reevaluate approaches to exclusivity, windowing, and AI." While specifics are deferred to future communications, the inclusion of exclusivity reevaluation is significant. The multiplatform releases of Sea of Thieves and Hi-Fi Rush on PlayStation sparked intense debate among Xbox fans, and Sharma appears to be signaling that the conversation is far from over. Whether that means more Xbox exclusives going multiplatform or a recommitment to console exclusivity remains to be seen.
What Comes Next: The June Showcase
The first major rollout of the new Xbox direction is scheduled for the Xbox Showcase in June 2026, where fans can expect to see the refreshed logo, updates on Project Helix, and the first wave of content announcements aligned with the new strategy. With over 500 million players worldwide, Xbox under Sharma's leadership is betting that brand clarity, platform improvements, and a willingness to acknowledge past missteps will be enough to reverse recent momentum losses. The "We Are Xbox" memo is the starting gun. What lands in June will determine whether this is a genuine reset or simply a fresh coat of paint on familiar ambitions.
