Xbox boss Phil Spencer is retiring after 12 years leading Microsoft’s gaming division. His replacement is Asha Sharma, the president of Microsoft’s CoreAI Product division. And in the new Xbox head’s first memo, she promises to avoid AI slop, but makes it clear that AI will be a part of the brand’s future.
On February 20, as reported by IGN, Spencer is stepping down from his role as CEO of Microsoft Gaming after over a decade leading Xbox. While many assumed his replacement would be Sarah Bond, the president of Xbox, that wasn’t the case. Bond is also leaving Xbox alongside Spencer. Instead, Sharma has been chosen to lead the Xbox division, and in her first memo to the company, obtained by The Verge and later shared by Xbox, the former head of AI at Microsoft promised “the return of Xbox” and claimed she would avoid flooding Xbox with AI slop, but that it would “evolve” and be a part of Xbox’s “future.”
“As monetization and AI evolve and influence this future, we will not chase short-term efficiency or flood our ecosystem with soulless AI slop,” said Sharma. “Games are and always will be art, crafted by humans, and created with the most innovative technology provided by us.”
The new Xbox boss also promised that more great games were coming.
“We must have great games beloved by players before we do anything,” said Sharma. “Unforgettable characters, stories that make us feel, innovative gameplay, and creative excellence. We will empower our studios, invest in iconic franchises, and back bold new ideas. We will take risks. We will enter new categories and markets where we can add real value, grounded in what players care about most.”
New Xbox boss committed to the console side of the business, but…
As for future consoles, something Xbox has previously confirmed and teased, Sharma says the company will “celebrate” its fans and history with a “renewed commitment to Xbox starting with console.” The new boss made it clear, however, that Xbox isn’t going back to being simply a console and the brand will continue to expand to more platforms, like mobile and streaming.
“Gaming now lives across devices, not within the limits of any single piece of hardware,” said Sharma. “As we expand across PC, mobile, and cloud, Xbox should feel seamless, instant, and worthy of the communities we serve. We will break down barriers so developers can build once and reach players everywhere without compromise.”
Sharma’s memo walks a tightrope. She is trying to convince the hardcore Xbox gamers out there that she can be trusted to avoid AI slop, despite her history of working with AI, and that she’s committed to bringing the brand back to its Xbox 360 glory days while also signaling to executives and investors that AI will be part of Xbox’s growing future across non-Xbox devices. Tricky rope to walk, and while I think her memo is solid, the key will be what actually happens over the next few months and years.
Is this a new era for Xbox, or are we seeing the first signs that Xbox is truly dead and about to be consumed by Microsoft?

