As the Game Developer’s Conference (GDC) rolls on this week, one of the biggest keynotes came from Xbox. That’s because the company took the stage to reveal new information on Project Helix, the recently revealed codename for its next-generation console.
As previously detailed by Xbox CEO Asha Sharma, Project Helix is being designed to play console and PC games. The keynote states that as part of Xbox’s multi-year partnership with AMD, Project Helix will be powered by a custom AMD SoC (basically a multi-integrated microchip) and is co-designed for the next generation of DirectX and FSR.
What that means is that the hardware will deliver, according to an Xbox Wire post by vice president Jason Ronald, “an order of magnitude leap in ray tracing performance and capability [that] integrates intelligence directly into the graphics and compute pipeline, and drives meaningful gains in efficiency, scale, and visual ambition.” Or, to put it plainly, games will look more realistic, boast more dynamic worlds, and feel more immersive overall.
Ronald also reveals that Xbox plans to ship alpha versions of Project Helix to developers starting in 2027. He also discusses Xbox’s strategy for “breaking down the barriers between console and PC games” to create more seamless cross-play across multiple devices. The goal is to give studios a simplified development path to help reduce production costs.
To this end, Xbox is also taking a page from the ROG Xbox Ally by introducing an Xbox mode to Windows 11 in April, starting in unspecified select markets. Xbox mode lets players switch seamlessly between work and game applications, “with a familiar full screen and controller optimized Xbox experience while embracing the openness of Windows,” according to Ronald.
With developers getting their first look at Project Helix next year, we probably shouldn’t expect a full reveal until 2028 at the earliest. It’s hard not to feel a little surprised that Xbox is openly discussing its next console already, until you realize it will be six years since the Xbox Series X/S launch this November. The flow of time is a strange and unsettling beast sometimes.
