By Tom Warren, a senior editor covering Microsoft, PC gaming, console, and tech. He founded WinRumors, a site dedicated to Microsoft news, before joining The Verge in 2012.
Microsoft has moved on from the Xbox One and is no longer creating first-party games for its previous generation of consoles. “We’ve moved on to Gen 9,” says Xbox Game Studios chief Matt Booty, referring to the Xbox Series S / X generation, in an interview with Axios.
While Microsoft will still support Xbox One hardware and games like Minecraft running on the previous generation, no internal studios are working on new games for the Xbox One anymore. Microsoft has been slowly pushing to this point, using Xbox Cloud Gaming to offer up games like Microsoft Flight Simulator to existing Xbox One users.
Microsoft’s recent Xbox Games Showcase didn’t contain any first-party games that will run on the Xbox One natively, and Booty says the company will continue to leverage its Xbox Cloud Gaming infrastructure to offer the latest games to Xbox One users. “That’s how we’re going to maintain support,” says Booty.
Microsoft’s own game developers are now focused on Xbox Series S / X consoles, despite claims that some developers are asking Microsoft to drop mandatory Xbox Series S compatibility for the latest Xbox games. The $299 Xbox Series S launched as a console capable of 1440p gaming at up to 120fps, but many games have only hit 1080p and without the higher frame rates of the more powerful Xbox Series X.
Microsoft’s larger and more powerful Xbox Series X has more raw GPU power and also a larger 16GB of RAM, with the smaller Xbox Series S offering just 10GB of RAM. The memory constraints have been painful for some developers, but Microsoft has worked to try and
Read more on theverge.com