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Sony wants AI to turn your gaming moments into shareable highlights

Sony's new patent could make sharing your gaming highlights as easy as playing the game.

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If you have ever gone on an absolute rampage in a multiplayer game and wanted to share it, you know how painful the process is. You record, scrub through footage, clip the moment, edit it, and then finally share it. Sony wants to change all of that, and AI is at the center of it.

As discovered by MP1st, Sony Interactive Entertainment filed a patent application with the USPTO on May 5, 2026, under document ID “12616902,” for an AI system that automatically selects your best gaming moments and turns them into shareable highlights, without you lifting a finger.

But how will it work?

As the patent suggests, the system will watch your gameplay in real time and collect data on everything that happens, including kills, wins, boss defeats, rare events, and even funny or unexpected moments. A machine learning model then identifies which of these are worth highlighting.

What makes it interesting is that the AI will factor in your personal player profile. Your skill level, your usual play style, and how often you pull off a particular move all matter. A beginner’s first win gets flagged as a highlight, but for a seasoned veteran, it won’t even register. The system is designed to recognize what is special for you, not just pick generic cool moments that anyone could have.

Once a moment is captured, the system will generate a polished “moment asset.” This could be a stylized highlight card, a screenshot collage with a short description, a clean video clip, or even a 3D collectible. So instead of raw, unedited footage, you get something that is ready to post on social media or share on Discord straight away.

Will this actually happen though?

Sony and other gaming companies file patents constantly, and a large number of them never see the light of day. Even if this one moves forward, do not expect it to land via a PS5 system update anytime soon. This feels more like something Sony could be building toward for the PS6.

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That said, if Sony does pull this off, it would be a genuine win for anyone who loves sharing gaming moments online. It will also help Sony improve its social media presence, as even players who don’t know video editing will be able to share their memorable clips. It will be a win-win situation for both parties.

Rachit Agarwal
Rachit is a seasoned tech journalist with over ten years of experience covering the consumer technology landscape.
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