
Microsoft is in hot water again. Just days after laying off over 9000 employees, the tech giant is now being dragged for using an AI-generated image in a recent Xbox hiring post. And netizens are not staying silent.
The controversial post was for the Xbox Graphics team, looking to hire developers with experience in GPU performance and device drivers. It listed two job roles — Senior Software Engineer – Xbox Graphics and Software Engineer 2 – Xbox Graphics, both based in Redmond, Washington.

But what caught everyone’s eye wasn’t the job role — it was the AI-generated image used to promote it.
Bad Timing, Worse Image
The image showed a girl staring at the back of a computer monitor. No keyboard, no sense — just poor design. Netizens were quick to mock it. Some joked Microsoft should hire a real graphics designer before hiring for Xbox Graphics.
A Microsoft employee has drawn criticism for sharing a widely-ridiculed AI image to advertise empty roles on Xbox’s Graphics team.
Much of the criticism cites the recent layoffs of 9,000 Microsoft employees across its various divisions. https://t.co/KKz2Q1CbrG pic.twitter.com/iFIqndFpZJ
— IGN (@IGN) July 14, 2025
Critics also pointed out the irony. After firing thousands of real people, Microsoft used art made by AI — in a job post, no less. “This is what you fired people for?” one user commented on X (formerly Twitter). Another said, “At least let humans handle creativity.”
Good ol AI slop pic.twitter.com/eJpkqB5Fac
— DamSamage (@OtakuExile) July 15, 2025
I can stare at the back of a PC monitor and smash keys….I should apply
— xX_Dr. R☢️D_Xx (@xXSupaFryeXx) July 14, 2025
Using AI tools is nothing new. But doing it right after mass layoffs sends a loud message. It feels cold. It feels like humans are being replaced — not just in factories or code, but in art and design too.
And when the image looks cheap and generic? It only adds fuel to the fire.
This isn’t just about one bad picture. It’s about a company that’s seen as prioritizing machines over people. That’s a tough look when 9000 families are still dealing with lost jobs.
The Bigger Picture
Microsoft is a global tech leader. Every move it makes is watched. Using AI art in a public job post, especially for a graphics team, feels tone-deaf. It raises real questions about how tech giants see the future — one that might not have much space for real people.
Let’s be real: AI can help. But when it replaces skilled work just to save time or money, it’s a problem. This hiring post wasn’t just a bad image — it was bad judgment.
Because the way a company treats creativity — and people — shows us what kind of future they’re building. And right now, Microsoft’s future looks more machine than human.
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