PlayStation 5 Pro
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Sony exec says consoles will remain the “core” of its business

Okay, maybe consider working on the crust.

As reported by Eurogamer, Hideaki Nishino, the CEO of PlayStationā€™s ā€œPlatform Business Group,ā€ has stated in an interview with Nikkei that consoles will remain a part of the companyā€™s ā€œcoreā€ of their business but says that additional platforms like PC will help it increase its share of the game market.

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I mean, he would say that, since his job is managing that division and promoting its hardware. However, it has been a bit harder to justify or get excited by new consoles from Sony or Microsoft recently, often because those games can be found elsewhere. However, keeping this in mind, Nishino states (according to Eurogamerā€™s translation), ā€œPCs are difficult to set up, but with PlayStation, once you turn it on, you can experience the content you bought straight away.”

Kind of! Consoles have certainly strayed away from just jamming a game in and playing it ā€œstraight away.ā€ Usually, when I get a game on console, I expect that itā€™s going to spend some time installing and updating. If you buy digitally, youā€™ll be spending some time waiting for it to download, and if your internet isnā€™t speed-of-light, that can take quite a while. But I see his point, and it isn’t a novel one. PCs take some knowledge and maintenance. Itā€™s easier to explain to my parents how to get a game on their Switch than it is to help them update their GPU drivers. To say otherwise would be disingenuous, even if things seem to be converging.

So, on one hand, bringing their games to PC might get purchases from gamers who donā€™t care to own a console. On the other hand, some gamers who would have bought a PlayStation for exclusives no longer have a reason to. At the same time, console architecture is becoming less proprietary as the years go on, so porting is less of an issue and not necessarily a major cost.

As it is right now, I still own a PS5, but itā€™s nowhere near as indispensable as my Switch. I donā€™t mind exclusivity, and I feel a library with a unique personality lends meaning to a console. Thatā€™s maybe not important to everyone, but as someone who eats video games every day, I like them to taste a bit different.

At the very least, this means that there are still plans to continue the PlayStation lineage. Just last week, we received news that the PlayStation 5 Pro is on the horizon, offering minor performance gains for a dizzyingly high price tag. At this point, I donā€™t see the PlayStation 6 announcement coming for a few years, and Iā€™m not convinced it will be able to justify the price all that well later. I guess what Iā€™m saying is: if Sony wants consoles to remain a ā€œcoreā€ part of their business, they should probably have more convincing reasons.


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Image of Zoey Handley
Zoey Handley
Staff Writer - Zoey is a gaming gadabout. She got her start blogging with the community in 2018 and hit the front page soon after. Normally found exploring indie experiments and retro libraries, she does her best to remain chronically uncool.