Today Microsoft celebrates the start of its fourth (or fifth?) generation of video game console hardware with the launch of the Xbox Series X/S. But Microsoft Xbox Chief Phil Spencer says the company’s gaming efforts almost didn’t make it to this point, and Microsoft was considering abandoning the console space just after the 2013 launch of the Xbox One launch.
In an extensive interview with Shacknews, Spencer looks back a bit at the tumult within Microsoft in general (and the Xbox division in particular) leading up to the Xbox One rollout. The retirement of Xbox President Don Mattrick in July of 2013, just after the Xbox One’s troubled E3 debut, left planning for the Xbox One launch “distributed amongst the company in what I would say is a way that wasn’t really feasible for Xbox,” Spencer said.
With just months to go before launch when Mattrick left, control of the Xbox brand was splintered across three teams: a platform team headed by Marc Whitten; a first-party games team led by Spencer in “another part of the company; and a separate marketing team that had been “moved out” from the rest of the Xbox planning. “I don’t think it was the best move for stability of our launch,” Spencer recalled.