Microsoft announced Wednesday it will be revamping its tiered gaming subscription service Xbox Game Pass with expanded game libraries, including PC titles, unlimited cloud gaming, new in-game benefits and a reconfigured rewards system — and increasing Game Pass’ pricing to match the changes.

Previously, Xbox Game Pass offered a Core package priced at $9.99 per month, a Standard option for $14.99, and an Ultimate that costs $19.99. Now, the Game Pass product will be reworked into the Essential tier ($9.99), the Premium version ($14.99), and the new Ultimate edition, which is increasing to $29.99 per month.

All three tiers will now be playable across PC, console and cloud gaming.

Per Xbox, “Today’s Game Pass Core subscribers will automatically move to Essential, Standard subscribers will transition to Premium, and Ultimate subscribers will remain in the Ultimate plan.” The PC-only Game Pass offering will continue as an option for existing subscribers, but no longer offered to new customers.

Additionally, Game Pass is expanding its library Wednesday to include more than 45 new titles like, “Hogwarts Legacy” and “Diablo IV,” which are available at both the Ultimate and Premium levels.

The price increase announcement was made just hours after Amazon unveiled a major overhaul to its gaming offer, Amazon Luna, which will now include more popular Microsoft-owned titles, like “Indiana Jones and the Great Circle.”

To account for Ultimate’s $10 price increase, customers at that level will now have access to more than 75 day-one releases a year, including upcoming games “Call of Duty: Black Ops 7,” “High on Life 2,” “Keeper,” “Ninja Gaiden 4,” and “The Outer Worlds 2,” and receive subscriptions to Fortnite Crew (priced at $11.99 per month) and Ubisoft+ Classics (nearly $16 a month) at no additional cost.

Xbox will also be offering Ultimate subscribers “our best quality streaming and shortest wait times” via Xbox Cloud Gaming, which is moving out of its “Beta” testing phase as of Wednesday.

The changes to Xbox Game Pass come on the heels of Microsoft setting a high price for its upcoming Ally handheld gaming consoles, and increasing the cost of its existing Xbox Series X and S hardware.