- Xbox Copilot For Gaming Function will be published on Mobile in April for Xbox initiates
- Copilot is an AI acolyte designed to improve the Xbox experience
- The tool will help players in play and will be “personalized for you”
Microsoft shared new details on its new Copilot For Gaming feature, which should be put online on mobile for the Xbox initiates in April.
In the latest episode of the Podcast Xbox, the Host Ethan Rothamel was joined by Fatima Kardar, CVP Gaming AI, and Jason Ronald, vice-president of the next generation, to discuss the development of Copilot for the game, a new sidekick AI aimed at improving the Xbox (via Xbox Wire) experience.
“This is one of the things we work on and we want to get it out to players to try,” Kardar said. “Copilot in the context of Xbox must be on the gameplay, it must be personalized to you, the way you like to play and it should be able to help you go further in the games, to be your companion and to connect with the family and the communities.”
Microsoft’s co -pilot was published in 2023 and is described as an AI chatbot and an acute assistant that can be used on Windows, in particular applications like Word, Excel, Outlook and PowerPoint.
Now that the AI tool arrives in Xbox, Kardar has explained that the companion can be personalized to help players and present himself when he needs a game.
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“The AI will be there and you can chat with it and talk to yourself if that’s what you need, but really AI can bring these people together and help you say when your friends do things.”
Kardar continued, saying: “It is not only a question of introducing yourself to AI to help you, it is AI that appears at the right time. So I think we really have to think about the experience we have built, it cannot be intrusive, it cannot appear in the middle of the game.”
Kardar said Xbox wanted people to “try it” because the more the people who do it, the more the co -pilot will learn. This is one of the reasons why it comes first on mobile for the Xbox initiates next month, according to Ronald, because it is a faster way for Microsoft to receive comments.




