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Tom’s Hardware
Tom’s Hardware
Technology
Luke James

Microsoft Gaming Copilot hits Windows in public beta — in-game AI overlay goes live for PC players

Gaming Copilot.

Microsoft began rolling out its new Gaming Copilot assistant to Windows users as part of a public beta on September 19, following a previous rollout to Xbox Insiders in August. The feature, located within the Xbox Game Bar overlay, provides players with real-time in-game support using AI-driven context from their screen and Xbox account.

Unlike past versions of Copilot integrated into Windows or Microsoft 365, Gaming Copilot is built with screen context and real-time game awareness. It reads from your Xbox account history, sees what you’re playing, and can analyze screen content on demand to answer in-game questions. Microsoft says it’s designed to help players find achievements, plan builds, and navigate quests without needing to alt-tab to wikis or YouTube.

On paper, Gaming Copilot resembles third-party tools like Overwolf, but it operates at the system level within the Game Bar overlay, which provides more reliable full-screen behavior and compatibility with DirectX titles. Microsoft has also confirmed that the assistant can be pinned as a widget and activated with push-to-talk voice controls, two features already present in this early beta.

The company has not disclosed whether any of the Copilot inference runs locally or if it’s entirely cloud-based. There is also no mention of NPU acceleration, which would matter for players using Snapdragon X laptops or hybrid-core CPUs with on-device AI blocks. This will be a key testing point, particularly as Microsoft has framed the Copilot experience as optimized for new handhelds like the ROG Ally X.

Anti-cheat compatibility is another open question. Vendors like Easy Anti-Cheat and BattlEye generally whitelist Game Bar itself, but Copilot is a more complex overlay, and Microsoft hasn’t clarified whether any specific protections are in place. With real-time screenshot analysis and persistent widgets, it’s not clear how Copilot will behave in titles with aggressive DRM or competitive match enforcement.

With the release of Gaming Copilot, Microsoft appears to be making a concerted effort to make Windows feel more like a native gaming platform. Just days before the Copilot rollout, the company updated the Xbox app to serve as a unified launcher that aggregates titles from Steam, Epic, GOG, and others. Together, these changes transform Windows from a passive host OS to an active participant in the gaming experience.

Gaming Copilot is now available for players aged 18 and older, in all regions except mainland China.

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