Microsoft has reportedly held an internal townhall meeting with employees that saw the company pledge it will keep making Xbox consoles. The purported event is said to have been held mere days after the emergence of reports that the company is planning to sacrifice some Xbox console exclusives in order to embrace multi-platform publishing.
The widely reported news of the Xbox multi-platform push elicited predominantly surprised reactions from both the company's fandom and non-Xbox gamers. Some fans went as far as to speculate that Microsoft is planning to «pull a Sega,» referring to the historic occasion on which the Japanese gaming giant exited the console business in 2001 after its then-two-year-old Dreamcast was deemed a commercial failure. According to such opinions, a scenario in which the Xbox catalog went multi-platform would severely undermine the value of owning an Xbox system, making it a likely indicator of Microsoft exiting the console business altogether.
Microsoft appears to disagree with that sentiment even though it has so far done little to dispel the multi-platform publishing rumors. That's suggested by a recent report from journalist Shannon Liao, which states that the company held an internal townhall meeting that saw Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer personally assure employees the tech giant will keep making Xbox hardware. The executive specifically said that Xbox consoles will continue to play part in Microsoft's multi-device gaming strategy, as per the same source.
The townhall meeting is said to have taken place on Tuesday, February 6, just 24 hours after Spencer publicly responded to the Xbox multi-platform drama. That move saw the executive announce an event meant to offer a «business update» on Microsoft's gaming strategy. While the exact date of the happening is still up in the air, Spencer said the event is to take place on the week of February 12, so presumably no later than the end of the work week on February 16. Assuming the executive
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