Microsoft, you promised that Windows 10 would be "the best operating system for gamers ever", and at your Windows event today, you showcased some features that undeniably lived up to that promise, particularly DirectX 12. However, when it came to one of the most-requested features for PC gaming, bringing Xbox games to PC, the whole thing fell flat. Your new feature that Phil Spencer demonstrated, streaming Xbox One games and media from your console to your Windows 10 device, does not help PC gaming in the slightest. Why? Because the same restriction that's been there from the first Xbox console is still there. You still have to own an Xbox One console to play the games, unless the developer opts to support PC specifically with a port- and that often doesn't happen with many Xbox titles. This isn't PC gaming, this is using your Windows PC as a second screen for the console. Microsoft, please, NO! Make Windows 10 a real part of your Xbox ecosystem. Let it actually install and run Xbox One games, not just stream them from a console. If I have to buy an Xbox One to play the latest games on my PC, why wouldn't I just use the console and skip the computer? If this is technically unfeasible, offer better incentives for developers to port to PC, and bring many more of your first-party titles to Windows 10 PC. You do have cross-platform multiplayer between X1 and W10 now, but please give us more than Minecraft to do it with. You've enhanced PC power with DirectX 12, but you've then relegated PC to a glorified second screen for your Xbox One console.

Microsoft, please add real support for full-fledged cross-platform gaming to Windows 10, or at least step up your efforts to bring many more first-party Xbox titles across to Windows PC. Thank you.