This month's big Xbox update adds several titles to the list of games you can stream from your personal library, among other features.
An Xbox Wire post touts that there are over 1,000 games in the "Stream your own game collection" library, including recent releases Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 and SpongeBob SquarePants: Titans of the Tide. Keep in mind that only Xbox Game Pass subscribers can stream their owned games. The extensive list of supported games is on the Xbox website.
Meanwhile, Microsoft has finally launched the beta for its Gaming Copilot AI assistant on the Xbox mobile app. Gaming Copilot, which has already rolled out on Windows PCs, is essentially a chatbot that "knows what’s happening in your game in real-time," allowing you to ask questions and seek tips and strategies.
Gaming Copilot on the Xbox mobile app lets you ask a chatbot questions about the game you're playing.
Microsoft Copilot is generally unpopular, and the integration of the AI assistant into the Xbox ecosystem is somewhat controversial. Users have leveled criticisms over Gaming Copilot gathering information from their Xbox profiles and its use of screen captures of user activity. Microsoft claimed that these screenshots are not used to train AI models and that Gaming Copilot is an entirely optional feature.
Other highlights of the November Xbox update include the expansion of the Xbox full-screen experience to additional Windows devices. The ROG Xbox Ally, which recently received its own update, was the first Windows handheld to officially support the console-like UI.
The Xbox Wire post also boasts that over 1,000 game support the Xbox Play Anywhere feature and reminds us about the Xbox-themed Backbone Pro and the horrific SpongeBob-branded Xbox controller.
Source
An Xbox Wire post touts that there are over 1,000 games in the "Stream your own game collection" library, including recent releases Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 and SpongeBob SquarePants: Titans of the Tide. Keep in mind that only Xbox Game Pass subscribers can stream their owned games. The extensive list of supported games is on the Xbox website.
Meanwhile, Microsoft has finally launched the beta for its Gaming Copilot AI assistant on the Xbox mobile app. Gaming Copilot, which has already rolled out on Windows PCs, is essentially a chatbot that "knows what’s happening in your game in real-time," allowing you to ask questions and seek tips and strategies.
Gaming Copilot on the Xbox mobile app lets you ask a chatbot questions about the game you're playing.
Microsoft Copilot is generally unpopular, and the integration of the AI assistant into the Xbox ecosystem is somewhat controversial. Users have leveled criticisms over Gaming Copilot gathering information from their Xbox profiles and its use of screen captures of user activity. Microsoft claimed that these screenshots are not used to train AI models and that Gaming Copilot is an entirely optional feature.
Other highlights of the November Xbox update include the expansion of the Xbox full-screen experience to additional Windows devices. The ROG Xbox Ally, which recently received its own update, was the first Windows handheld to officially support the console-like UI.
The Xbox Wire post also boasts that over 1,000 game support the Xbox Play Anywhere feature and reminds us about the Xbox-themed Backbone Pro and the horrific SpongeBob-branded Xbox controller.
Source