Is Schedule 1 on Xbox? What Gamers Need to Know

Schedule 1 has been generating serious buzz in the indie gaming space, and one of the most common questions popping up is whether it's available on Xbox. The short answer is: not currently — but the full picture is worth understanding before you decide how to approach it.

What Is Schedule 1?

Schedule 1 is an indie simulation game developed by solo developer Ty Hau under the TVGS label. Released into Steam Early Access in March 2025, the game puts players in the role of a small-time drug dealer building an operation from the ground up in a fictional town. Think business management meets open-world sandbox, with a darkly comedic tone.

The game attracted significant attention almost immediately after launch, climbing Steam charts and accumulating hundreds of thousands of players within its first weeks. Its success story is notable precisely because it launched as a solo-developed Early Access title — not a AAA release with a massive marketing budget.

Is Schedule 1 Available on Xbox Right Now?

As of its current release status, Schedule 1 is a PC-exclusive title, available only through Steam on Windows. There is no Xbox version — not on Xbox Series X|S, Xbox One, or Xbox Game Pass.

This is important to understand because:

  • The game launched in Early Access, meaning it's still actively in development
  • Solo and small indie developers typically prioritize a single platform during early development to manage scope and resources
  • The developer has not made any confirmed, official announcement about an Xbox port

If you've seen social media posts or videos suggesting otherwise, those are likely speculation or fan wishlist content — not official releases.

Why Isn't It on Xbox Yet?

Understanding why a game like this stays PC-exclusive during early development helps set realistic expectations. 🎮

Platform certification is a significant barrier. Getting a game onto Xbox requires passing Microsoft's certification process, which involves testing, compliance with platform standards, and handling platform-specific features like achievements, Xbox Live integration, and controller input mapping. That process takes time and resources that a solo developer is often not ready to tackle until the core game is more stable.

Early Access doesn't exist on Xbox in the same way. Steam's Early Access model allows developers to ship an unfinished game, collect revenue, and iterate publicly. Xbox doesn't have a direct equivalent — games on Xbox are generally expected to be in a more polished, shippable state before certification. This structural difference means many Early Access hits start on Steam and only come to consoles once they've matured.

Porting requires real engineering work. Moving from PC to Xbox isn't just flipping a switch. It involves optimizing for console hardware, reworking UI and controls for gamepad-first play, and addressing performance on fixed hardware specs. For a solo developer actively updating the game, this work is typically deferred.

What About Xbox Game Pass?

There's no indication Schedule 1 is coming to Xbox Game Pass at this time. Game Pass titles are negotiated deals between Microsoft and publishers or developers. While indie games do appear on Game Pass, it typically happens after a game has reached a wider audience and a commercial deal has been structured — not during the chaotic early weeks of an Early Access launch.

Could an Xbox Version Happen Eventually?

Possibly — but it's worth separating genuine possibility from assumption.

Indie games that achieve breakout success on Steam do frequently come to consoles. Titles like Hades, Hollow Knight, and Stardew Valley all followed that trajectory. The pattern generally looks like this:

StageWhat Typically Happens
Early Access launchPC/Steam only
Stable build achievedDeveloper evaluates console viability
Publisher involvement (if any)Console ports become more feasible
Full release or major updateConsole announcement possible

Schedule 1 fits the profile of a game that could eventually make this journey — but "could" is doing a lot of work in that sentence. A solo developer navigating ongoing updates, bug fixes, and community feedback is managing a full workload already.

Can You Play It on Xbox Hardware at All?

If you own an Xbox but also have a Windows PC, you can play Schedule 1 through Steam on PC — Xbox hardware and a Steam library are not mutually exclusive. Some players also use cloud streaming services like NVIDIA GeForce NOW or Xbox Cloud Gaming (where PC Game Pass titles stream), though Schedule 1 is not currently available through Xbox Cloud Gaming either.

If your only gaming device is an Xbox console with no access to a Windows PC, you currently have no way to play Schedule 1. 🕹️

The Variables That Matter for Your Situation

Whether this is a dealbreaker depends on factors specific to your setup:

  • Do you have a gaming PC alongside your Xbox? If so, Steam access solves the problem entirely.
  • Are you comfortable with Early Access titles? The game is still in active development, which means the version on PC today will look different from whatever a potential console port might eventually be.
  • How long are you willing to wait? If an Xbox version eventually arrives, it would likely come post-1.0 — which could be a year or more away, and isn't guaranteed.
  • How closely are you following the developer's official channels? The only reliable way to know if an Xbox announcement happens is through the developer's Steam page or official social accounts.

The gap between "this game exists and is popular" and "this game is on the platform I use" is real — and how much it matters depends entirely on what hardware you have access to and how patient you're willing to be. 📋