Xbox confirmed at the Game Developers Conference that Gaming Copilot—its LLM-powered in-game assistant—will roll out to current-generation consoles, meaning Xbox Series X|S, later in 2026. “I’m excited to announce that later this year, we will bring Gaming Copilot to the current-generation consoles, and we will continue to bring it to more services that players are playing,” said Sonali Yadav, Xbox’s gaming AI partner group product manager, as reported by GamesRadar+.
The tool has been in beta on Windows 11, the Xbox mobile app, and ROG Xbox Ally handhelds for nearly a year now, and this would mark its first appearance on a traditional console.
What Gaming Copilot actually does while you play
At its core, Gaming Copilot is a game guide replacement built into the platform. Got stuck trying to figure out a Diablo 4 quest drop or need a quick rundown on how to get started in Sea of Thieves? That’s the idea—ask the AI, get an answer, without tabbing out or picking up your phone. It also handles game recommendations based on your play history and can pull up account details on request.
On consoles, voice will likely be the primary way most players interact with it, since typing through a gamepad is its own kind of suffering.
Xbox wants Gaming Copilot to work for developers, not just players
Microsoft was also careful to frame Gaming Copilot as a tool that supports game creators rather than undermining them. Gaming AI general manager Haiyan Zhang stressed that creative control stays with developers, and Yadav noted Xbox is exploring ways to license content from creators whose guides and walkthroughs the AI draws from.
Early usage data showed that 30% of interactions were game-help queries, while a surprisingly high 19% of users were just… chatting with it for fun.


