Kiki Wolfkill has left Xbox after 28 years at Microsoft, closing out a run that stretched from art direction to film and TV leadership. Wolfkill announced the move on LinkedIn, and she said last Friday was her final day at the company. For players, this matters because she helped shape the screen side of Xbox’s biggest brands, including Halo, Fallout, Minecraft, and Gears of War.

The departure comes as Xbox transitions into a new era under new CEO Asha Sharma. Wolfkill said, There is a version of me outside of Microsoft that I'm excited to grow and evolve, and she added that news about what comes next will arrive soon. That makes this more than a routine corporate exit; it points to another shift in how Xbox handles its adaptations and transmedia projects.

About Kiki Wolfkill’s Xbox Run

Wolfkill spent 1998 through 2007 as a Director of Art at Microsoft Game Studios. After that, she moved into a more transmedia-focused role and became executive producer for Halo 4 at 343 Industries. Those jobs put her in the middle of Xbox’s biggest creative handoffs, where game identity and outside media had to line up without losing what made the games work in the first place.

She later became the lead of Halo transmedia and entertainment, and that work led to the creation of the Halo TV show. Wolfkill also served as head of film and TV for the larger Xbox brand. In practical terms, that meant she helped decide which Xbox properties could move to screens, how they should be positioned, and how closely they should stay tied to the games.

What Wolfkill Helped Build

  • Halo transmedia and entertainment, which led to the Halo TV show
  • Fallout series for Amazon
  • Minecraft movie
  • Upcoming Gears of War adaptation at Netflix

That list shows how central Wolfkill became to Xbox’s screen strategy. Each project carried a different challenge, from adapting a sprawling post-apocalyptic series like Fallout for Amazon to turning Minecraft into a movie that could work beyond the game’s own audience. The upcoming Gears of War adaptation at Netflix adds another high-profile name to that pipeline, and her exit leaves that work in motion rather than complete.