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ComputingEntertainmentGamingMicrosoftTech

Xbox Full Screen Experience now works on any Windows PC, laptop, or tablet

Xbox’s console-like UI lands on laptops, desktops, and tablets.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Nov 21, 2025, 5:00 PM EST
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A lineup of Windows gaming devices showcasing the Xbox Full Screen Experience interface, including handhelds like the ROG Ally, MSI Claw, and Lenovo Legion Go, alongside gaming laptops, an Xbox controller, and a large desktop monitor and tower, all displaying the same console-style Xbox UI on their screens.
Image: Xbox / Microsoft
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Microsoft quietly nudged another bit of Xbox-ness into Windows this month: the Xbox Full Screen Experience (FSE) — the console-like, controller-first UI that used to be the domain of handheld Windows gaming devices — is rolling out to more traditional PCs, laptops, and tablets for testers. If you’ve ever wished Windows felt a little more like an Xbox when you pick up a gamepad, this is the company’s most direct answer yet.

What it is

Think of FSE like a “gaming desktop” that hides everything else and gives you a console-style launcher: big tiles for your games, quick access to Game Pass and Xbox services, and navigation designed for a controller instead of a mouse. It’s meant to be distraction-free and to make switching between games and apps feel quick and tactile — the kind of thing that makes more sense when you’re holding a small handheld or lounging with a controller on your couch. Microsoft also says it helps free up background resources for gaming when active.

Where FSE came from

FSE first appeared as a feature for the ROG Xbox Ally and the Ally X — ASUS’s Windows handhelds that ship with Xbox integrations built in. It felt natural there: handheld + controller-first UI = fewer compromises. Now Microsoft has taken that same interface and, in a staged rollout, started to make it available to other Windows 11 form factors.

How to try it on your PC

If you want to poke at it right now, here’s what you need and how to turn it on:

  • Be on Windows 11 Insider Preview Build 26220.7271 (Dev or Beta Channels) or newer.
  • Have the Xbox app installed from the Microsoft Store (it’s the default on most systems).
  • Be enrolled in the Xbox Insider Program and opt into the PC gaming preview via the Xbox Insider Hub (that’s an extra step beyond Windows Insider).

To open FSE once you’re eligible: hover over the Task View icon in the taskbar and choose Xbox full screen experience, open Game Bar → Settings, or press Win + F11 to toggle it. Microsoft notes the rollout is gradual, so even Windows Insiders may not see it immediately.

Gradual rollout and early wrinkles

This is not a mass launch. Microsoft is doing a staged rollout to Insiders first, which means availability will be patchy for a while. Early reports from testers and outlets show that some people get it immediately, others don’t, and attempts to force the UI onto unsupported devices — via community tools or registry fiddles — have produced mixed results and sometimes broken behavior. In short: patience, and don’t expect this to suddenly replace your normal Windows workflow overnight.

Why Microsoft might be doing this

There are a few likely motives that add up:

  • Platform unification. Microsoft has been steadily folding Xbox-first features into Windows where it makes sense. FSE is a small but visible reminder that Microsoft still sees a future where Xbox and PC experiences blur.
  • Competitive posture. Valve’s Steam Deck and SteamOS showed there’s an appetite for console-like UI on PCs; Microsoft is positioning Windows to offer a native, controller-friendly alternative.
  • OEM collaboration. Partners like ASUS and MSI shipping devices with FSE support make it easier for Microsoft to tout a “Windows gaming” vision that spans handhelds and clamshell laptops.

Is it useful on a regular desktop or laptop?

That depends. For someone who primarily plays with a controller and wants an Xbox-flavored launcher that’s quick to navigate from the couch, FSE can be pleasant and low-friction. For a power-user who juggles multiple windows, mouse-driven workflows, and desktop-centered tools, the benefit is smaller — you can always toggle back to the regular desktop. Some reviewers and community members have questioned whether the interface is strictly necessary on non-handheld devices.

Tips and caveats

  • If you try FSE and don’t like it, Microsoft lets you turn the experience off from Windows Settings → Gaming → Full screen experience or simply exit back to the desktop from within FSE.
  • You’ll get the fullest experience if you use an Xbox controller (navigation and task switching are built around it).
  • Because the rollout is gradual, don’t assume your machine is broken if you don’t see the option — Microsoft has specifically said it’s gating the feature.

What to watch next

Keep an eye on two things: (1) whether Microsoft widens access beyond Insiders and removes the Xbox Insider registration requirement, and (2) whether more OEMs enable or tailor the interface for laptops and tablets. If Microsoft leans into FSE as a standard optional “gaming shell” for Windows, we could see deeper integrations with Game Pass, cloud gaming, and quicker cross-store navigation.

FSE is an incremental but sensible move: take a controller-first UI that already works well on handheld Windows devices, and give testers across PCs a taste of the same flow. It won’t replace Windows for most desktop users, but for controller-first play and handheld owners? It’s exactly the sort of polish that makes gaming feel more like a living room console again — except on a PC. If you’re curious, join the Insider programs, install the right build, and give Win + F11 a try. If you’re not, it’s harmless background work from Microsoft that won’t get in your way until you ask for it.


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