Summary

After almost 20 years, Microsoft is officially closing the Xbox 360 storefront. After July 13, 2025, you will no longer be able to purchase games on your vintage 360. Here’s what that means.

The Xbox 360 Store Is Closing

You won’t be able to spend money on the Xbox 360 Store or Xbox 360 Marketplace from July 14, 2025. If you want to own a game specifically to play on your Xbox 360, you’ll need to buy it before this date using your console. Used copies that you find on disc will continue to work just fine.

Microsoft’s announcement only affects the purchasing of digital titles on the Xbox 360, which means that as long as you own a game (or another item, like an add-on) you’ll still be able to download it from your Download History (under Settings > Account) after this date.

Used copies of Dragon’s Dogma, Darksiders II, and Unreal Tournament III for Xbox 360.

Since everything was made available via the store, the shutdown will affect a huge variety of items from games and trials to add-ons, avatar items, gamerpics, trailers, and apps for non-games. In-game purchases, subscriptions, and video content in the Movies & TV app will also be pulled from sale.

Many Games Are Discounted Right Now

The closure of the store means that many games, add-ons, and other items will no longer be accessible on the Xbox 360 console. As a result, many of these games (and others) are currently on deep sale on the storefront.

TrueAchievementshas a full list of games that are currently on sale, with more being added each week. Expect more discounts before the store closes for good.

Xbox Live Gold vs Game Pass Core compared.

Some games likeArmy of Twoand its sequelsThe 40th DayandThe Devil’s Cartelnever saw releases outside of the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3.The Chronicles of Riddick: Assault on Dark Athenamet a similar fate, though PC and Mac ports were available.

Delisted Gameshas a list of 47 titles that never saw release anywhere else (not even the PlayStation 3), that will officially be “lost forever” on July 29. Most of these are obscure indie titles, but there are some big names in there likeFruit Ninja Kinect, Xbox Live Arcade exclusive twoSouth Parkgames, and forgettable arcade portDouble Dragon II: Wander of the Dragons.

Online Play and Updates Are Unaffected

Game updates will still work on the Xbox 360 after the store is shut down, both for digital titles and disc-based titles. You’ll need to sign in and connect to online services for this to work.

Xbox Live will also still be active, so you can play online for as long as the servers for your chosen games are still up.

Microsoft still requires a premium subscription to play online on the Xbox 360. This was once called Xbox Live Gold but is now known asGame Pass Core. It’ll set you back $9.99/month, just like Xbox Live Gold once did. If youhave a Game Pass subscriptionfor another console (like the Xbox One, or Series X|S), you’re able to play on your Xbox 360 simply by signing in.

The End of an Era

The Xbox 360 arguably represents Microsoft’s finest hour in console gaming. While many games of the era areplayable via backward compatibility on modern Xbox consoles, available in disc form, or are playable elsewhere; many games, add-ons, and in-game items are not.

If you still have an Xbox 360 plugged in somewhere, perhaps as a fallback bedroom entertainment system, now’s the time to grab any titles you might want to play in the near future. Prefer discs?Thrift stores are a goldmine for physical media from this era.