Sony to Cease Production of Physical PlayStation Game Discs by 2028, Shifting Entirely to Digital Distribution

Deep News07-02

Sony Interactive Entertainment announced on July 1st via its official blog that, starting January 2028, all new games released on the PlayStation platform will cease production of physical discs and will be available solely in digital form through the PlayStation Store and retail channels. This move signifies the formal initiation of a full digital strategy for console games by this hardware giant.

The company stated in its announcement that this adjustment is based on consumer preferences and the ongoing industry-wide shift from physical to digital content. The sales proportion of digital games on the PlayStation platform has risen from less than 20% a decade ago to nearly 80% in the 2025 fiscal year, surging further to 85% in the first quarter of the 2026 fiscal year. From a revenue structure perspective, the physical disc business now accounts for only 3% of the total revenue from the games segment, with digital content revenue being approximately seven times that of the physical business.

According to the policy arrangement, physical edition games already released or with confirmed release plans before January 2028 will not be affected, and users' existing PS4, PS5 disc-drive consoles and purchased discs will continue to function normally. Concurrently, Sony also announced it will phase out digital store purchase channels for the PS3 and PS Vita, starting in Latin America and the Middle East from August 2026, with a global full closure by July 2027.

Sony's upcoming next-generation console, the PS6, is expected to no longer include an optical drive as standard, aligning with the design direction of the previously released PS5 Pro which also omitted a built-in drive. This decision has sparked widespread discussion among the player community: supporters believe digitalization is the inevitable direction of industry development, with its convenience and subscription services better aligning with modern consumption habits; opponents, however, worry this move will strip players of ownership of their games and bring an end to the second-hand physical disc market.

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