Microsoft detailed its next-generation Xbox console, Project Helix, at the 2026 Game Developers Conference, highlighting a custom AMD SoC for Xbox and PC games, advanced ray tracing, AI upscaling, and alpha developer kits shipping in 2027. The announcements include platform convergence, game preservation efforts, and follow recent leadership changes.
At the Game Developers Conference (GDC) 2026 on March 11, Microsoft's vice president of next-generation experiences, Jason Ronald, presented 'Building for the Future with Xbox,' confirming details first shared by new gaming CEO Asha Sharma. Sharma, who succeeded Phil Spencer after his nearly 40-year tenure and amid Sarah Bond's departure from Xbox, posted on social media: 'Project Helix will lead in performance and play your Xbox and PC games.'
Project Helix features a custom AMD-based system-on-chip co-designed for the next generation of DirectX, delivering an 'order of magnitude improvement' in ray tracing performance, including path tracing capabilities, GPU-directed work graph execution, and next-generation AMD FSR Next with neural rendering, machine learning upscaling, multiframe generation, and ray regeneration. Additional technologies encompass deep texture compression via neural texture compression and Direct Storage enhanced with Zstd.
Ronald emphasized the console's versatility for both Xbox and PC games, underscoring a 'player-first experience' amid blurring lines between console, PC, and mobile gaming. 'PC is becoming an increasingly important part of the Xbox experience,' he said, with initiatives like Xbox Mode—previously Xbox Full Screen Experience, debuted on the Xbox ROG Ally—rolling out to Windows 11 PCs next month to unify experiences via Play Anywhere.
Alpha development kits will ship to developers in 2027, delaying preorders and launches. Microsoft teased the console earlier that day via X posts from its Game Development account, sharing 'Xbox at GDC. Sneak peek' photos of a dev kit shell marked 'XDK,' resembling an Xbox One kit to build anticipation.
In Xbox's 25th anniversary year, Microsoft reaffirmed its Game Preservation program. 'We feel a deep responsibility to preserve games from the past,' Ronald stated. Upcoming 2026 releases include a Halo remaster, a new Forza Horizon, and a Gears of War prequel.
Microsoft's Xbox Wire blog provides a full summary of Ronald's presentation.