Sony clarifies that it will still make PlayStation discs after 2028, just not for new games

midian182

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In a nutshell: Sony's decision to end production of physical game discs in 2028 has seen the kind of angry response usually reserved for news about forced AI integrations. But it turns out that the company will be making these discs after that cut-off date. The big caveat is that it will only be making them for games that were already released, or will be released, on disc before January 2028.

The clarification comes from a private message sent to PlayStation developers and publishers, first reported by Game File. Sony told partners they will still be able to place re-orders for existing disc games after the January 2028 deadline.

Sony's original announcement said physical disc production would end for new games releasing on PlayStation consoles from January 2028. After that, new titles will be sold through the PlayStation Store and at retailers in digital formats only. The company also said the change would have no impact on games already released, or those scheduled to arrive before the deadline in disc format.

The private message explains what that "no impact" line means. Existing disc games are not being switched off at the factory door. Publishers can still order more copies, at least for titles that qualified before the cut-off.

Sony also told developers it plans to offer a way for publishers to sell new digital games at retail. Details have not been finalized, but the obvious possibility is a boxed product or card containing a download code rather than a disc, which is something we're seeing more often these days. That would keep PlayStation games on store shelves after 2028, though in a form that offers none of the ownership benefits people associate with physical media.

Sony has reportedly told partners that disc ordering will change. That could affect how often older games are reprinted, how large orders need to be, or whether smaller publishers find the system worth using.

Former PlayStation Worldwide Studios boss Shawn Layden has called Sony's move "a fairly dramatic decision," which feels about right. Speaking to Eurogamer, the 32-year industry veteran said he had no idea the announcement was coming and did not necessarily agree with it.

Layden described the change as a "straight spreadsheet decision," with Sony likely weighing the cost of keeping disc production alive against a shrinking share of physical buyers. He said the question of giving up discs came up every year during his time at Sony, but broadband access was always the limiting factor.

"What are disc sales compared to digital sales? And I'm old enough to remember when digital sales were like 10 percent – I'm old enough to remember when digital sales were zero percent because we didn't have a digital market! And that number just grew over time," Layden said.

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Nope, no, nope. It's one thing when games are available on Steam for $5, then I'm willing to give up some rights. Nintendo, with the Switch 2, has banned people, taken away their whole games library and I think they even bricked people's devices. This is unacceptable on so many levels and I think piracy is only going to increase. I've already gone open source and I think moving forward I'm just going to not pay for games that are full price or don't have a physical copy.
 
Governments will have to amend laws regarding 'Digital Ownership' rights for consumers, to give them rights on digital purchases that stops the 'we can take it all away at any minute' nonsense that these content providers enjoy and abuse.

At the minute its a rigged game in favour of the corporations, they're only doing this because laws say they can.

Of course, I dont expect the big, fat cancerous orange smoothbrain in the Whitehouse to do anything that would harm big buisness but other territories will eventually have to act.
 
Physical media Only for older games?

It's obvious Sony wants their PlayStation 6 to fail right out of the gate...and I couldn't be happier for it since Sony have made terrible decision after terrible decision and all against the consumer.

Of course the PlayStation corporate bootlickers will come and defend the greedy brand, let's see who would those be.
 
First, we gave away our rights when Steam started. Then, Nintendo made the same. Now, Playstation joined. That is not surprising, really. There is not much diff between Sony and Valve at pricing, sales and so on, and now they are same in the ownership. There is no solution, it is convenience. Even if I got a disk based game with a collectors edition, I often bought the digital version as it is just easier to use.

I partially dropped Valve as soon as GoG came up, and move installers to my NAS. I buy games on GoG first, if the title wont drop there in a 6 months, then I might buy it on Steam. I still buy games on psn, if the sale is right.

I don't pirate games... yet. But if a game I bought become unavailable, I will be more than happy to sail high seas. I already do that on my Vita, and on some retro devices I own. Will do the same as soon as **** hit the fan on other store fronts.

My take is that Sony wants to integrate the games distribution for the ps6 portable. People would complain: I bought a new game in a box, why cant I play it on my handheld? that would be a large pushback as well. So, they decided to have this upcoming issue reduced.

People accepted Valve, Nintendo, and their sales are growing. There is absolutely nothing Sony should be afraid from doing the same.
 
Governments will have to amend laws regarding 'Digital Ownership' rights for consumers, to give them rights on digital purchases that stops the 'we can take it all away at any minute' nonsense that these content providers enjoy and abuse.

At the minute its a rigged game in favour of the corporations, they're only doing this because laws say they can.

Of course, I dont expect the big, fat cancerous orange smoothbrain in the Whitehouse to do anything that would harm big buisness but other territories will eventually have to act.
Why would they have to? The system works fine as is, to the tune of billions of dollars a year.

You WANT the government to change something, doesn't mean they have to.
 
I thought that was pretty clear in their original announcement; no new games get discs after 2028.

It'll just make PC gaming even more appealing. Especially when Sony is an untrustworthy gatekeeper.
 
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