Microsoft’s
Massive Xbox Downsizing Signals the Brutal Reality of the AI Revolution
We’re beginning to see the secondary
and other follow-on impacts of AI.
EXPERT OPINION BY HOWARD TULLMAN, GENERAL MANAGING PARTNER, G2T3V
AND CHICAGO HIGH TECH INVESTORS @TULLMAN
Jul 14, 2026
Sony’s PlayStation has
been the global market leader for years, while Microsoft’s Xbox has been a
distant second even after failed attempts by Microsoft to make its games a
visible presence in the desktop world, where it clearly dominates the office
installed base worldwide. Both Sony and Microsoft missed the migration of
gamers to small mobile devices, where Nintendo prospered for a while—even
before the phone revolution completely changed the video gaming space.
Now, we’re in the early
innings of another sea change where the major tech players in the gaming
industry are realizing that they no longer need armies of programmers,
designers and developers to build and deliver the next generation of games.
This is due to AI, of course, but also because
the new games—mainly mobile—will be so lightweight and rapid as a result of the
AI enhancements that there will be no need for any kind of bulky and costly
game boxes or platform devices. Finally, as is the case across dozens of
industries these days, the cost of the chips used in these boxes has been
driven skyward by the adjacent and competitive demands of the AI companies for
product that has cut into margins and may ultimately result in price increases
at the worst possible time.
The latest salvo in this
latest war of enforced attrition was last week’s announcement that Microsoft
was making major changes in the Xbox video game business which entailed
specifically cutting the Xbox workforce by 20 percent—about
1,600 employees now and another 1,200 plus over the next year. More
importantly, the company is largely exiting the studio space, where it spent
billions on expensive acquisitions not too many years ago.
The personnel growth in
the MSFT games division was massive while the overall demand, player base and
playtime all decreased substantially. It turns out—as with many other pre-phone
and streaming activities—that millions of gamers would rather watch the play of
truly talented players on YouTube than be second-rate participants in
multiplayer competitions or simply play older games at home by themselves.
As far as the various
studios are concerned, a few big ones like Activision Blizzard will shrink but
remain, some others will simply be shut down, some are being encouraged to spin
off and go off on their own with temporary support and assistance from Microsoft,
and a few will remain until they too can be responsibly booted one way or
another or quietly sold off to other buyers who right now seem to be few and
far between.
But the most important
takeaway from this highly visible and intentional effort at downsizing one
lagging division to help offset enormous commitments and investments elsewhere
in the enterprise—particularly in AI capabilities—is that we’re beginning to see
the secondary and other follow-on impacts of the AI revolution. Thousands of
Microsoft employees didn’t just lose their jobs because the AI tools could
build new games, faster, cheaper and even more compelling than the former
workers, they were also directly dismissed because the sales, marketing, manufacturing and promotion efforts of the entire
video game division were shrinking and Xboxes were losing share and playtime as
the gamers went elsewhere and the old boxes lost their sway and value.
This is only a single
example, but I fully expect that we’re about to see many other industries
rapidly roiled by similar advancements in process and speed or response time
which will permit—in the name of speed, efficiency and massive cost savings,
the wholesale elimination of entire groups and departments in businesses which
will simply no longer be necessary because all of their functions in the
value-creation chain will be substituted for with new AI-infused technologies.
I’ll be writing shortly about a staggering combination in the advertising
industry that brings together two powerful technologies and will completely
upset and reorganize the ad creation business into a faster and cheaper system,
which will also create more engaging and effective products.
It’s clear that a new
form of M&A is already actively helping to connect and combine disparate
companies with tools and services that are addressing common overarching
problems in industries like advertising, and it’s also clear that these
individual companies aren’t likely to build end-to-end systems by themselves in
a timely fashion whether through lack of capacity or all the necessary
resources or because they have been so deeply focused on solving their segment
of the overall solution that they didn’t realize that a better and more robust
and compelling solution could be offered by combining multiple offerings into a
single comprehensive process.