For years, Xbox has been slowly tearing down the walls separating consoles, PCs, and cloud gaming. What started as a simple perk, Xbox Play Anywhere has evolved into something much bigger. Now, the feature is positioned as the foundation for the company’s long-term vision. As the industry increasingly embraces platform-agnostic gaming, Xbox’s next chapter isn’t tied to one box. It’s about letting gamers access their games anywhere, anytime, on any device.
Over 1,000 games now fully support Xbox Play Anywhere, including older releases like Forza Horizon 3, Halo Wars 2, and the Retro Classics collection. As well as all 29 games highlighted in the Xbox Showcase 2025, such as the upcoming Gears of War: Reloaded remaster.
Whether you’re on an Xbox Series console, Windows PC, or upcoming Xbox Ally handhelds, Play Anywhere also ensures your games and progress travel with you.
Players can enjoy cross-progression, synced saves, Achievements, and seamless transitions across consoles, PC, handhelds, and the cloud. Cloud Gaming (Beta), Remote Play, and native downloads are all integrated, making platform boundaries nearly irrelevant.
As mentioned above, to further support this vision, Xbox has announced the new ROG Xbox Ally handhelds. Developed in partnership with ASUS, it will launch in Holiday 2025. The devices will utilize the new custom handheld-optimized Xbox Full Screen Experience, unifying all your Xbox, Game Pass, Battle.net, Steam, and Epic Games libraries. For more on the new handheld PC, head over to our ROG Xbox Ally article.
But Xbox’s ambitions don’t stop there; earlier this year, job listings revealed a game preservation and emulation team being assembled. The company seems eyeing bringing classic Xbox and Xbox 360 forward to modern devices, potentially including the PS5 and Switch 2. It wants your entire Xbox library — old and new — to remain playable across hardware generations for years to come.
In addition to upcoming partnerships like Roblox being optimized for handhelds, Xbox Play Anywhere is no longer just a cloud experiment. It’s rapidly becoming Xbox’s true long-term ecosystem, one that follows you, not your hardware.