Xbox skips 2025 wrapped amid anniversary budget priorities

A new report indicates that Microsoft will not release an Xbox Wrapped summary for 2025, redirecting marketing funds to upcoming anniversaries. The decision comes during a challenging year for the Xbox brand, marked by layoffs and project cancellations. Meanwhile, competitors like Sony and Valve have already launched their year-end recaps.

Microsoft's Xbox division appears to be forgoing its annual 'Wrapped' feature for 2025, a personalized recap of users' gaming habits similar to Spotify's year-end summaries. According to Windows Central journalist Jez Corden, sources confirm that Xbox is not producing this recap this year. "My sources suggest that Xbox is not doing a 'Wrapped' this year. And there's potentially a good reason," Corden wrote.

The primary reason cited is a reallocation of marketing budgets toward significant milestones in 2026. Xbox itself marks its 25th anniversary, having launched as a brand on November 15, 2001. This coincides with Halo's 25th anniversary, Blizzard's 35th (founded in February 1991), and Bethesda's 40th (established in June 1986). "A lot of the 'marketing budget' that would've typically been allocated to something like an Xbox Wrapped is being poured into efforts to celebrate these major milestones for Xbox, its brands, and some of its games," Corden explained.

This decision unfolds against a backdrop of difficulties for Xbox in 2025, including thousands of layoffs, the cancellation of games such as The Initiative's Perfect Dark, Rare's Everwild, and an unannounced ZeniMax MMO, declining hardware sales, and struggles within the Call of Duty series.

Despite these setbacks, optimism persists for upcoming reveals. Microsoft's president of game content and studios, Matt Booty, announced that Xbox will host a Dev Direct stream in January 2026. "We've got more stuff coming up than we can fit in one show," Booty stated, hinting at updates for projects like the Fable reboot and the Forza Horizon series, alongside other Xbox Game Studios titles.

In contrast, Sony's 2025 Wrap-Up and Steam Replay 2025 are already available on their respective platforms.

Related Articles

Xbox executives announce return to Xbox branding and reevaluation of game exclusivity in a company meeting.
Image generated by AI

Xbox drops Microsoft Gaming name and reevaluates exclusivity

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

Xbox CEO Asha Sharma and chief content officer Matt Booty announced the gaming division is reverting from 'Microsoft Gaming' to simply 'Xbox.' In a memo shared on Xbox Wire following an all-hands meeting, they addressed player frustrations and pledged to reevaluate the approach to game exclusivity. The move signals a renewed focus on console as the foundation amid broader platform ambitions.

Microsoft has confirmed that gaming CEO Asha Sharma retired the controversial 2024 'This is an Xbox' campaign, stating it 'didn’t feel like Xbox,' as part of a brand reset emphasizing console roots. The move follows fan and internal backlash, amid leadership changes and next-gen Project Helix hardware plans.

Reported by AI

Microsoft has announced an Xbox Partner Preview showcase scheduled for Thursday, March 26, at 5pm UK time. The event will feature updates on third-party games including Ryu Ga Gotoku's Stranger Than Heaven, Stalker 2: Heart of Chornobyl, and The Expanse: Osiris Reborn. It marks the first such broadcast since Phil Spencer's retirement and the appointment of new gaming CEO Asha Sharma.

Xbox Gaming CEO Asha Sharma announced Project Helix, Microsoft's upcoming next-generation console, which will support both Xbox and PC games while leading in performance. The reveal via social media follows recent leadership changes, with more details planned at next week's Game Developers Conference.

Reported by AI

Former PlayStation Studios chairman Shawn Layden described the future of Xbox Game Pass as having a 'grim prognosis' on LinkedIn. His comments follow signals from Xbox head Asha Sharma that the subscription service is too expensive and requires an overhaul. Microsoft has not updated subscriber figures since reporting 34 million paying users two years ago.

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline