For many fans of the franchise,Gears 5was a major return to form. It retained the gritty nature of the franchise, while introducing more open areas and interesting storylines.Gears5’s cliffhanger endingall but guaranteed that another entry in the franchise would come about, but nothing has been officially announced yet.
In fact, rumors aboutGears 6are highly limited too. The only real murmur out there is that The Coalition is working on a newGearsgame, as well as a new IP, but nothing there is really concrete. However, a new job listing may lend credence to these rumors—at least to the newGearstitle.

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A job listing for The Coalition on Microsoft’s Careers portal, seemingly first spotted by Pure Xbox, is looking for an experienced Lead Mission Designer. This listing mentions how this position will work closely with the campaign director and level design team to focus on the overall “experience, pacing, rewards, and features” inGears 6. The inclusion of acampaign inGears 6is obviously no surprise, but the development thereof is a nice little confirmation.
This September marks the 3-year date sinceGear 5’s release, so it’s about time for a newGearsgame. However, because of this listing, it stands to reason thatGears 6is still in early development. It could still be a few years before its release, and at least a couple before fans hear of it. It could come sooner, sure, but generally speaking, announcing games too early doesn’t tend to go over well.Gears 6should not be anotherElder Scrolls 6situation, after all.
While the wait may be long, the future of this Xbox studio and all Xbox studios looks bright. Game Pass is going as strong as ever, andGears 6would be a day one release. Major games are coming to theservice over the next 12 months, includingHollow Knight: SilksongandStarfield,and plenty of first-party games are in development –Avowed, The Outer Worlds 2, Redfall, Fable, State of Decay 3,and more, just to name a few.
Gears 6is not officially up there with those, but with this job listing, it might as well be. What matters is not how quickly The Coalition gets it done—just that it holds up to its predecessor, or surpasses it, when it does release.