# Streaming Your Own Games with Xbox Cloud Gaming Coming Next Month [Xbox Cloud Gaming will let you stream your own games in November](https://www.theverge.com/2024/10/11/24268038/xbox-cloud-gaming-project-lapland-game-library) by Tom Warren for The Verge via [gamesindustry.biz](https://www.gamesindustry.biz/report-xbox-cloud-gaming-to-support-titles-from-players-game-libraries) > Microsoft is planning to support the streaming of Xbox game libraries next month. Sources familiar with Microsoft’s plans tell The Verge that the company is getting ready to test the ability to stream games that you own that aren’t part of the existing Xbox Game Pass library. Cool to see xCloud, which I guess is now called Xbox Cloud Gaming, will support this type of streaming. PlayStation players have been able to do this for years with Vita, PS4/PS5 streaming, and now the Portal. A big advantage Microsoft will have is not needing players to have games installed on a console and said console be on to make streaming work. This will be like a digital movie collection—you have the license, you can stream it. I was going to write about this on Monday, but got a little lost with Sophie McEvoy's linking at GamesIndustry.biz. Her article says "According to The Verge," but links to an article from Tom at The Verge from [2022](https://www.theverge.com/2022/6/9/23159492/xbox-game-pass-cloud-gaming-library-owned-games-feature), when this feature was announced. The Verge ran [a new article](https://www.theverge.com/2024/10/11/24268038/xbox-cloud-gaming-project-lapland-game-library) on October 11 that I had to find myself. Normally, I would let this hyperlink typo go, but this isn't Sophie's [[Aptoide is Not the First non-Apple iOS Store|first slip up that I've caught]]. That article still has not issued a correction and I assume this Verge link won't be fixed either.