Skip to main content

PlayStation chief says the next console is still three years away

PlayStation 4 bundle
Julian Chokkattu/Digital Trends

The PlayStation 4 has been out for nearly five years, and despite its colossal sales figures and library of exclusive games, some players are hankering to hear news about the system’s successor. According to Sony Interactive Entertainment president John Kodera, however, we have a few more years to wait before that happens.

“We will use the next three years to prepare the next step, to crouch down so that we can jump higher into the future,” Kodera said to a group of reporters, including the Wall Street Journal. “We need to depart from the traditional way of looking at the console life cycle. We’re no longer in a time when you can think just about the console or just about the network like they’re two different things.”

The comments appear to walk back a statement Kodera had made earlier in the week, in which he said the PlayStation 4 was in the “final phase” of its life cycle. With the increased power of the PlayStation 4 Pro, games are capable of running at much higher resolutions and framerates than they were on the standard PlayStation 4, but as the newer system has no true exclusives, it somewhat limits developers’ ability to fully harness its power.

The combination of traditional player-side computing power with cloud-based technology has allowed the current generation of games to do things they wouldn’t normally be able to do. In addition to games like Destiny and The Division pairing large numbers of players together in a similar fashion to MMO games, the upcoming Xbox One and PC title Crackdown makes use of Microsoft’s Azure cloud servers to bring enhanced environmental destruction to multiplayer.

Thus far, Sony hasn’t experimented with this quite as much, relying more on traditional single-player games to take the lead in the console hardware race, but with its PlayStation Now subscription service offering players a way to stream games already, this could feasibly be expanded to offer games not possible on a console alone.

In April, sales of the PlayStation 4 passed the PlayStation 3, even though the older system was out for seven years before it was replaced. Sony’s console also topped monthly hardware sales on the back of the excellent God of War.

Editors' Recommendations

Gabe Gurwin
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Gabe Gurwin has been playing games since 1997, beginning with the N64 and the Super Nintendo. He began his journalism career…
One year later, my PlayStation VR2 is collecting dust
The PlayStation VR2 sits on a table next to Sense controllers.

One year ago, I took my first step into virtual reality with the PlayStation VR2. One year later, I haven't walked much further.

I spent a long time watching the VR sect of the gaming medium from the sidelines, curious about this new form of interaction, but never taking the full plunge. Impressed with the PSVR2’s specs and confident in Sony’s first-party capabilities, I bought it at launch in February 2022. After a week of use, I wrote that I “anticipate it’ll be a very supplemental gaming style for me in the future, not something I’ll want to do for hours every day.”

Read more
I made my own special-edition, Mario-themed PlayStation 5
A red and blue PS5 stands on a table with matching controllers.

While we can argue all day about which console is best, there's one PlayStation 5 feature that no other system can claim: customization. On the original PS5, players could easily snap off the system's faceplates and replace them with new ones. Sony would naturally keep that feature for its slimmer PS5 model, creating an entirely new line of console covers, starting with its Deep Earth Collection.

I didn't think much of that initially, considering that it was an expected feature. That is, until I turned my PS5 into my own custom, "special edition" Mario-themed console.

Read more
PlayStation State of Play, January 2024: How to watch and what to expect
Eve kneeling with her sword.

Sony announced its first State of Play of 2024 today. This digital showcase, which will take place on January 31, will set expectations for PlayStation's 2024, much like Xbox's Developer_Direct did for Sony a couple of weeks back. It's shaping up to be a lengthier show full of intriguing exclusives, so it's something that PlayStation fans will definitely want to tune into.

For those wondering when and where they should be tuning into the first State of Play of 2024, as well as what they should be expecting from it, we've rounded up all that useful information for you.
When is January 2024's State of Play?
The first State of Play of 2024 will begin at 2 p.m. PT on January 31. When it comes to length, Sony says that it will be "over 40 minutes long."
How to watch January 2024's State of Play
State of Play | January 31, 2024

Read more