Sony to end discs for new PlayStation releases as gaming shifts online


FILE PHOTO: PS5 games by PlayStation are seen for sale at a GameStop in Manhattan, New York, U.S., December 7, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo

July 1 (Reuters) - Sony said ⁠on Wednesday it will stop producing physical discs ⁠for all new games released on PlayStation consoles from ‌January 2028, marking a full shift to digital distribution as consumer purchases continue to move online.

Digital downloads accounted for about 80% of Sony's full-game ​software sales in fiscal 2025, according to ⁠the company, reflecting a ⁠years-long shift toward digital game purchases.

The Japanese entertainment and technology company ⁠said ‌new PlayStation titles released from January 2028 will be sold through the PlayStation Store and by ⁠retailers in digital formats only.

The change will not ​apply to games ‌released, or already scheduled for disc release, before that ⁠date.

Separately, Sony ​said it would begin shutting down the PlayStation Store on its legacy PS3 and PS Vita devices, starting with select markets this ⁠year and expanding globally in 2027.

The ​15- to 20-year-old consoles can no longer support the secure payment systems used by the modern PlayStation Network, the company said.

Once ⁠the stores close, users will no longer be able to purchase new content, although previously purchased games and content will remain available for download for the foreseeable future.

The PS3 store ​will close in Mexico, Honduras and ⁠Nicaragua from August, followed by additional Latin American and Middle Eastern ​markets later in the year. The ‌PS3 and PS Vita stores will ​close in all remaining markets in July 2027.

(Reporting by Anzar Mehraj in Bengaluru: Editing by Tasim Zahid)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

Vimeo owner Bending Spoons likely to open 14% above IPO price in Nasdaq debut
Startup Oxmiq raises $35 million to build chip architecture to lower cost of AI
Meta building cloud business to sell excess AI capacity, Bloomberg News reports
Micron, GM sign semiconductor supply agreement for vehicles
Swedish court orders Google to pay $1.5 billion to Klarna in antitrust damages
Defense startups raid auto and fracking sectors for parts to speed weapons output
Unchecked AI progress may pose catastrophic risks, UN panel warns
Wayve courts automakers with AI driving system that learns like humans
Tesla�settles lawsuit over deadly crash involving full self-driving
Xbox pulls out of�‘Project Fantasy’ video game from IO Interactive

Others Also Read