Key Takeaways
- Xbox Game Pass Ultimate receives 23% price reduction to $22.99 monthly from $29.99
- PC Game Pass sees 15% decrease to $13.99 monthly from $16.49
- Day-one Call of Duty releases removed from Game Pass lineup
- Gaming division revenue declined roughly 10% compared to prior year, hardware sales plummeted 32%
- Asha Sharma, Xbox’s new leader appointed in February, spearheaded the pricing revision
Microsoft’s gaming division has faced significant headwinds recently. The segment contributed merely 7% to overall company revenue during the most recent quarter, standing as the sole major business unit experiencing downward momentum.
The financial results painted a stark picture: hardware sales tumbled 32% following Microsoft’s decision to cancel two anticipated titles, “Everwild” and “Perfect Dark.” Xbox content and services revenue fell short of internal projections, according to CFO Amy Hood during the analyst earnings call.
Game Pass Ultimate had maintained a $29.99 monthly price point since October, when the company implemented a $10 increase. That pricing decision, evidence now suggests, created substantial subscriber resistance.
Asha Sharma, who assumed the Xbox leadership role, reportedly communicated to staff members via internal memo that the subscription service had reached an unsustainable price level. Sharma, previously an executive at Meta, took over from Phil Spencer in February following a broader leadership reorganization that included Sarah Bond’s departure.
Her solution centers on affordability over exclusivity. Game Pass Ultimate falls to $22.99 monthly — representing a 23% markdown. PC Game Pass decreases 15% to $13.99. Both adjustments take effect without delay.
The Call of Duty Adjustment
The pricing strategy comes with a significant concession. Fresh Call of Duty releases will no longer arrive on Game Pass at launch. Microsoft had positioned the franchise as a critical driver for subscription growth, particularly following its $75.4 billion Activision Blizzard acquisition in 2023.
Moving forward, subscribers wanting immediate access to new Call of Duty installments must purchase them separately at $69.99. These titles will join the Game Pass catalog approximately twelve months post-release.
The approach exchanges immediate content access for reduced subscription costs.
Microsoft characterized the changes as responding to community input. “Our players cover a wide breadth of geographies, preferences, and tastes,” the company stated in an official blog post.
Game Pass reached 34 million subscribers by 2024. Microsoft has yet to provide updated subscriber counts.
Competitive Market Dynamics
Xbox remains positioned behind Sony and Nintendo across both hardware sales and subscription service metrics. This competitive landscape has prompted Microsoft to reevaluate Game Pass’s value proposition and pricing architecture.
The cancellation of hardware initiatives and two game development projects signals a more comprehensive strategic review within the gaming division. Industry observers have raised questions about potential restructuring or divestiture scenarios, though Microsoft has issued no statements regarding such possibilities.
Amy Hood referenced an undisclosed impairment charge affecting the gaming segment during the recent earnings discussion. Specific financial impact remains unannounced.
MSFT stock showed approximately 0.79% gains in after-hours trading following the pricing announcement.
Wall Street maintains an optimistic stance on Microsoft broadly, with 34 Buy recommendations and 3 Hold ratings from analysts over the previous three months. The consensus price target stands at $581.61.

