Microsoft is launching its mobile game store in July

A Microsoft store entrance with the company's logo

Image Credits: Nicolas Economou/NurPhoto / Getty Images

Microsoft will launch its own mobile game store in July, the company announced at the Bloomberg Technology Summit on Thursday.

Xbox president Sarah Bond shared that the company plans to bring its first-party portfolio, which includes titles like Candy Crush and Minecraft, to the mobile store at launch. Microsoft then plans to open up the mobile store to other publishers. 

“We’re going to start on the web,” Bond said. “And we’re doing that because that really allows us to have it be an experience that’s accessible across all devices, all countries, no matter what, independent of the policies of closed ecosystem stores, and then we’re going to extend from there.”

By launching the store on the web, as opposed to an app, Microsoft would present an alternative to Apple and Google, which charge a 30% fee on sales. 

The official announcement comes as Microsoft has been talking about launching an Xbox mobile gaming store for quite some time now. Last December, Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer said the company was in discussions with partners about launching an Xbox mobile store, and noted that it would arrive sooner than later. 

Microsoft first hinted at a mobile store back in 2022 when it announced a deal to acquire Activision Blizzard. Microsoft had said in filings that one of the major reasons it wanted to acquire Activision Blizzard was to help build out its mobile gaming presence. In October 2022, Microsoft’s filings with the CMA revealed that it planned to create a new “Xbox Mobile Platform” that includes mobile games by Activision and King.

While the EU’s Digital Marketing Act (DMA) forces Apple and Google to open up their mobile app stores, Microsoft is looking to provide an alternative to the two in the United States and beyond the EU.

Conservative cell carrier Patriot Mobile hit by data breach

JJ Yeley (#15 Patriot Mobile Rick Ware Racing Ford) during the NASCAR Cup Series Highpoint 400 on July 23, 2023 at Pocono Raceway in Long Pond, Pennsylvania.

Image Credits: Rich Graessle/Icon Sportswire / Getty Images

U.S. cell carrier Patriot Mobile experienced a data breach that included subscribers’ personal information, including full names, email addresses, home ZIP codes and account PINs, TechCrunch has learned.

Patriot Mobile, which reportedly has fewer than 100,000 subscribers, bills itself as “America’s only Christian conservative wireless provider and our mission is to passionately defend our God-given Constitutional rights and freedoms while glorifying God.” 

On its website, the cell carrier displays photos of former Fox News host Glenn Beck, and former Trump administration officials Sebastian Gorka and Steve Bannon. The company has recently started to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars in support of conservative and pro-Christian candidates and causes in Texas. 

A hacker who claimed responsibility for the breach provided TechCrunch with a sample of data stolen from Patriot Mobile. TechCrunch verified that the sample of data contains authentic customer data, in part because an apparent bug on Patriot Mobile’s public website is also leaking some of the same personal information.

A Patriot Mobile spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment by TechCrunch.

Patriot Mobile is a mobile virtual network operator (MVNO), which means the company doesn’t own its network infrastructure but instead leases access from AT&T and T-Mobile. 

News of the data breach at Patriot Mobile comes a month after AT&T, the largest cell phone provider in the country, confirmed a large theft of customers’ personal and account information from several years prior. As a consequence of this breach, AT&T reset the account passcodes of millions of customers after TechCrunch informed the company that the leaked data contained encrypted passcodes that were easy to decrypt, and could be used to break into customers’ accounts.