ID@Xbox was Microsoft's answer to the indie bubble, the era in modern video game history when independent developers began finding mainstream success, starting with Braid in 2008. Braid was an Xbox Live Arcade exclusive, as was another pivotal indie hit, Super Meat Boy, when it landed in 2010. Small teams and solo creators were starting to represent a significant slice of the video game market, and digital distributors from Steam to the App Store were flooded with new titles.

From a publishing standpoint, it was soon clear that indie developers required wildly different resources than established AAA studios. ID@Xbox was designed to streamline the console publishing process, giving independent studios two free Xbox One development kits, access to the Xbox toolset, and marketing support.

Though the announcement of ID@Xbox was welcome, its roll-out in 2013 was rocky. A clause about launch parity, requiring all ID@Xbox games to land on Xbox One first or at the same time as other platforms, was a significant obstacle for many developers. Meanwhile, Microsoft was busy putting out a series of fires relating to its botched reveal of an "always-online" Xbox One. Many independent developers, including long-time Microsoft devotees like Salt and Sanctuary house Ska Studios, jumped ship to PlayStation, which was actively courting indies for the PlayStation 4.

Today, Sony has pulled way back on its indie publicity, while Microsoft has folded indie games into its consumer-facing business plans, showing titles from small studios alongside AAA powerhouses at its E3 conferences. In late 2017, Cuphead completed the ID@Xbox publishing process, immediately won all of the awards (and Hot Topic deals), and effectively reinvigorated the program's reputation. ID@Xbox has now published 1,000 games, and as of March, the program has paid out more than $1 billion in royalties to associated developers.

Chris Charla has been in charge of ID@Xbox from the beginning, and he's currently preparing developers for the future. The next console generation is on its way, with Microsoft likely to drop two new Xboxes in 2020 -- one of them is rumored to be built for streaming, using Microsoft's coming cloud gaming service.

"There's always new challenges," Charla said. "You know, like getting your game ready for streaming. How to structure your game so that it downloads really quickly and you can start playing it right away. These are things that we're working on constantly. We're always soliciting information from developers, sharing information back to developers."

The video game world has changed drastically since 2008, and indie games are no longer an anomaly. In fact, there are so many independent studios creating so many games that the "indie" modifier feels unnecessary, if not completely redundant -- even to the ID@Xbox crew.