Microsoft cuts 4,800 jobs, Xbox staff reduced

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1–2 minutes

Summary

Microsoft said it will cut 4,800 jobs, including about 20% of staff in its Xbox division.

Why this matters

The cuts show ongoing pressure in the tech sector and a significant restructuring of Microsoft’s gaming business. For workers and industry watchers, the changes signal further consolidation and uncertainty in gaming and technology jobs.

Microsoft began another round of layoffs, cutting 4,800 jobs, or about 2.1% of its workforce, according to a memo from Chief People Officer Amy Coleman.

“Our business is changing because the world around it is changing,” Coleman wrote. “The way technology is built, deployed, and used is transforming faster than at any point in my time here.”

Microsoft’s Xbox division will be among the hardest hit. About 20% of Xbox staff will be cut, with 1,600 jobs eliminated Monday and 3,200 Xbox roles set to be cut through fiscal 2027, Xbox chief Asha Sharma said in a post on X.

Sharma wrote that Xbox’s business “is not healthy,” and said the decisions do not reflect the talent or dedication of affected employees.

“These changes are about a bigger future for XBOX, not a smaller one,” she wrote. “The next decade of gaming will be larger, more global, and more creative than anything we’ve seen before.”

Microsoft had faced rumors for weeks that it was considering layoffs and studio closures at Xbox. The company expanded its gaming business through acquisitions beginning in 2018, including its $69 billion purchase of Activision in 2023. Its Xbox business has trailed PlayStation and Nintendo during the current console generation.

Earlier this year, Microsoft appointed Sharma to oversee Xbox. The company has also faced complications from a memory shortage and broader economic conditions.

Microsoft is also spinning out four gaming studios. Compulsion Games and Double Fine Productions will become independent again after Microsoft acquired them in the 2010s. Ninja Theory and Undead Labs, which joined Microsoft in 2018, will seek new owners.

The cuts add to a broader wave of tech layoffs. As of July, TrueUp’s tracker estimated that more than 160,000 tech layoffs had occurred in 2026, including at Meta, Oracle, Amazon, Cisco, and Wix.

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