Microsoft to cut thousands of jobs, Xbox to be hit hard

Microsoft to cut thousands of jobs, Xbox to be hit hard

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According to Microsoft's Amy Coleman, the company's executive vice president, the jobs that will be cut will not be replaced by AI, despite accepting the role automation has across the company.

Microsoft will cut some 4,800 jobs, including the largest overhaul in its gaming brand Xbox, the company said.
Approximately 3,200 jobs will be cut from the company's gaming operations in the coming fiscal year.
The move is meant to cut costs in the Xbox division, which has been struggling in recent years.
According to Microsoft's Amy Coleman, the company's executive vice president, the jobs that will be cut will not be replaced by AI, despite accepting the role automation has across the company.
"Our business is changing because the world around it is changing," Coleman wrote in a memo to Microsoft employees, adding that companies do not choose whether their industry changes, but they rather "only get to choose whether they change with it."
Console prices to rise
Explaining the move, CEO of Microsoft's Xbox brand Asha Sharma called the division's business "not healthy."
Sharma was appointed CEO in February, promising to return it to growth by 2027.
According to Sharma, Xbox will not become one of the companies that "mistake longevity for inevitability."
Since it acquired Activision Blizzard in 2024 for $68.7 billion (€60 billion), Xbox has gone through several rounds of cuts.
The company will also follow its competitors, Sony and Nintendo, in raising Xbox consoles' prices due to the component-cost surge fueled by AI that affects the gaming industry.

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