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Microsoft to phase out Xbox Copilot AI on consoles and mobile devices

Microsoft is winding down its Xbox Gaming Copilot AI feature, a controversial assistant designed to help players solve puzzles and navigate games faster. While available across PC, mobile, and console platforms, Copilot'

Image: NotebookCheck

Microsoft is winding down its Xbox Gaming Copilot AI feature, a controversial assistant designed to help players solve puzzles and navigate games faster. While available across PC, mobile, and console platforms, Copilot’s ability to effectively complete game segments by referencing existing guides has sparked pushback, especially within single-player communities.

Game walkthrough creators have criticized Copilot for potentially siphoning off their audiences, but even internally at Xbox, reactions were cautious. Xbox’s new head, Asha Sharma, confirmed plans to gradually retire Copilot on mobile devices and halt its development entirely for Xbox consoles.

No announcements have been made about the PC version, leaving its future unclear. Still, many see this move as a step toward preserving the challenge and satisfaction that come from solving puzzles without AI shortcuts-a key aspect in single-player experiences where independent problem-solving is valued.

Players who use hints often prefer traditional walkthrough websites over fully automated AI help. These platforms offer curated guidance without entirely replacing the gameplay experience, illustrating why AI solutions like Copilot need careful tuning and oversight to avoid diminishing game enjoyment.

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This decision aligns with a broader Microsoft and Xbox strategy aiming to refocus on player needs amid ongoing improvements to the Windows 11 gaming environment and upcoming projects like Project Helix. For Xbox and PC gamers, it signals a commitment to enhancing the quality and depth of play.

Ava Chen

AI Editor

Ava covers the rapidly evolving world of artificial intelligence, from foundational models and research labs to the real-world economics of intelligence. With a background in computational linguistics, she cuts through the hype to find out what actually works. She firmly believes that benchmarks are just marketing until reproduced in the wild.

via NotebookCheck

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