Microsoft’s new AI “Copilot for Gaming” struggles to justify its existence

May Be Interested In:Nina Jankowicz Creates New Disinfo Organization to Rally Europe to Attack American Free Speech



Last year, Microsoft showed off a pair of concept videos highlighting how “real-time conversations with your AI companion copilot” might one day provide personalized guidance and companionship while playing a solo game of Minecraft. Now, Microsoft is announcing that it will roll out “Copilot for Gaming” as an “ultimate gaming sidekick” that will be available via mobile app preview for Xbox Insiders starting in April.

Unfortunately, the current version of Microsoft’s gaming “copilot” seems to fall well short of last year’s demo, providing some bare-bones automation of functions that can mostly be achieved pretty easily today without the aid of AI. The new app feels less like a revolutionary new use case for conversational AI and more like a glorified, Xbox-branded version of Apple’s Siri.

Wait, is that it?

Watching a short, livestreamed demo of the new Copilot for Gaming app, my reactions quickly shifted from “that’s kind of neat” to “wait, is that it?” That process started from the very first moment, when a player asked, “I want to get back into Age of Empires… Can you install it?” Conversational installation prompts could be a bit more convenient than simply clicking the handful of buttons needed to start a game install without AI, but it’s not the most exciting use case to lead off with.

Read full article

Comments

share Share facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

Mexico’s legal battle against the U.S. gun industry | 60 Minutes
Mexico’s legal battle against the U.S. gun industry | 60 Minutes
India’s Big Five IT firms were looking forward to rebound. Now all bets are off.
India’s Big Five IT firms were looking forward to rebound. Now all bets are off.
Spot Light | Nawab cool
“Guess they were trying to get somebody else elected”; Trump questions $21 mn USAID fund for India voter turnout
“Guess they were trying to get somebody else elected”; Trump questions $21 mn USAID fund for India voter turnout
Trump, the Panama Canal and China’s Role: What We Know
Trump, the Panama Canal and China’s Role: What We Know
How 16.73 billion UPI transactions killed the ubiquitous toffee business | Mint
How 16.73 billion UPI transactions killed the ubiquitous toffee business | Mint
Uncovering the Untold: Where the Real Stories Lie | © 2025 | Daily News