Yes / No / Maybe?

Nintendo and Xbox are cozy right now. Minecraft is on Switch, complete with Xbox Live and achievement integration. They're cuddled up against one another, leaving us in a will they/won't they frenzy -- tantalizing near-romantic stuff from two of the most popular kids at Video Game Junior High. Nothing like the sworn frenemies relationship between Xbox and Sony.

There are many recent reports that Nintendo and Xbox are going to collaborate on something major. A lot of the rumors deviate slightly with regard to the finer details, but the broad concept is mostly the same: Xbox Game Pass and select Xbox first-party titles will eventually end up on Nintendo Switch.

For instance, Direct Feed Games says Xbox Game Pass is coming to Switch and Ori and the Blind Forest is cited as a game that will be sold individually on the Nintendo eShop. Game Informer adds to that by reporting it'll happen before the end of 2019. Windows Central ups the ante by saying Cuphead is also included, and that these first games are "test-cases for the new Xbox Live SDK for third-party developers." JeuxVideo has heard that Microsoft plans to make use of its Project xCloud tech to allow Game Pass titles to stream onto Switch; currently, Xbox Game Pass requires titles to be downloaded locally to an Xbox One.

Phil Spencer has been perfectly adamant in recent years that Xbox isn't a console. It's a platform. Microsoft's persistent efforts to break down the barriers between console and PC gaming has been representative of Spencer's goals. Getting Xbox on Switch would be exponentially more impactful -- not to mention entirely unbelievable only a few years ago.

There are a couple prime candidates for reveal events. E3 is obviously a fine place to announce a new partnership. But, considering how relevant this is to developers and how much tech is involved, this could happen at the Game Developers Conference in San Francisco in late March. Xbox has a session on March 20 where it'll introduce everyone to its new cross-platform SDK that'll allegedly expand Xbox's reach to more than two billion devices.

For now, we wait with bated breath. There are some sparks between Nintendo and Xbox, a little bit of chemistry. But will this flirtatious teasing lead to a full-on makeout sesh? Time will tell. And, as everyone knows, nothing is official until it's Internet Official.