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The 2026 XDS Insights Report examines how external development partnerships are evolving as they become a core part of modern production pipelines.
Based on input from 250+ industry professionals, the report shows an ecosystem moving beyond delivery risk and into a new phase shaped by coordination, governance, and long-term collaboration.
Download it here: XDS Insights Report
The 2026 XDS Insights Report reveals an external development ecosystem that is no longer defined by whether it works, but by how it evolves. Survey data from more than 250 professionals worldwide shows an industry moving beyond basic delivery concerns and into a new phase shaped by operational complexity, distributed teams, and
growing reliance on long-term external partnerships. This year’s report was created by Kaley Hurst and Steve Jaworski from Side, the award-winning global game development and services provider.
While confidence remains high, the real story is structural change. Studios are relying on external development not just as overflow support, but as a core part of production pipelines. As external collaboration becomes embedded in how games are built, the challenges facing partners are shifting from execution to coordination, governance, and visibility across increasingly complex workflows.
Communication Becomes the New Friction Point
For the first time, communication has overtaken delivery and security as the number-one challenge in external partnerships, rising roughly 15 points year over year on both sides.
The shift reflects how work itself has changed. Service providers are now split across work-from-home (40%), hybrid (36%), and in-office (25%) environments, while developers and publishers remain largely remote or hybrid. As distributed teams become the norm, coordination across time zones, pipelines, and subcontracted partners is emerging as the industry’s central challenge.
At the same time, many historical risks are declining. Security and infrastructure concerns reported by developers and publishers dropped 38 points, while quality and delivery misalignment reported by service providers fell 29 points. The baseline for external collaboration has improved significantly. What remains is the complexity of managing scale.
AI Adoption Is Advancing Under Governance
The report also shows an industry taking a cautious, policy-driven approach to AI.
Service providers continue to experiment with AI tools to improve efficiency, but studios are setting stricter guardrails around how those tools are used in production. Fewer than one in ten clients currently permit AI in contracted work, according to 54% of providers surveyed.
Rather than outright resistance, the trend points toward structured adoption. The share of developers and publishers calling for blanket AI prohibitions dropped from 44% to 18% year over year, replaced by targeted requirements focused on disclosure, data usage restrictions, and mandatory human review of AI-assisted outputs.
Disclosure of AI use is now the top contract clause priority for both parties, underscoring a shift toward transparency and accountability as AI becomes part of the external development ecosystem.
“External development partnerships have matured significantly,” said Carla Rylance, Advisory Committee Chair and Head of Programming at XDS, and Head of Business Solutions at XDS Spark.
“The conversations have moved beyond ‘can they deliver on time’ into more sophisticated territory: governance, transparency, and coordination at scale. That evolution reflects how central external development has become to modern production.”
Deals Still Start with a Handshake
Despite the growth of online portfolio marketplaces, relationships remain the primary driver of deal flow. Seventy-three percent of partnerships begin through industry events, while 67% originate from internal referrals, reinforcing the importance of community and trust within the ecosystem.
Contract structures are also evolving alongside production needs. Six- to twelve-month agreements are now the most common engagement length, overtaking shorter contracts for the first time on the service provider side. Both studios and partners are increasingly favoring retainer-style arrangements, signaling a shift toward continuity, long-term collaboration, and predictable capacity planning.
As pipelines expand, visibility across the supply chain is becoming more important. Forty-two percent of developers report that their providers subcontract portions of work to third parties, driving a growing need for transparency across multi-layered production networks.
“This year’s report reinforces the notion that gaming is an intrinsically human business,” said Deborah Kirkham, CEO of Side. “Companies need to balance technological innovation with human ingenuity so that from inception to launch, we create authentic experiences that connect with gamers today and tomorrow.”

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