It's not uncommon for console manufacturers like Microsoft and Sony to sell hardware at a loss, but thanks to a recent interview CNBC conducted with Xbox boss Phil Spencer, we now know roughly how much Microsoft is losing on each piece of current-gen hardware it sells.
Chatting to CNBC about the state of Microsoft's console business, the long-serving Xbox chief said the company currently loses between $100 to $200 on each sale of the Xbox Series X and budget Xbox Series S.
Spencer said the company accepts the loss because it anticipates recouping the cost when owners purchase accessories or buy software through the Xbox Marketplace.
Xbox owners can also access a huge variety of titles, including popular first-party content, through Xbox Game Pass. According to Spencer, the subscription service is currently turning a profit and accounts for 15 percent of Microsoft's content and services revenue.
Speaking more broadly about the future of Game Pass (via The Verge), Spencer also quashed the notion that the Netflix-style model will eventually become the main revenue driver at the company. "We don’t have this future where I think 50–70 percent of our revenue comes from subscriptions," he said, explaining that eventually the company will have "reached everybody on console that wants to subscribe."
Earlier this year, Microsoft told Windows Central it had no plans to increase the price of the Xbox Series X | S after Sony chose to raise the price of the PlayStation 5 in key markets due to "high global inflation rates."
More recently, however, Spencer told those at a WSJ Live (via The Verge reporter Tom Warren) event that the company will have to "raise the prices on certain things" at some point, but confirmed that those increases
Read more on gamedeveloper.com