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PlayStation’s disc-killing move may have blindsided the very partners keeping its games business alive

Sony’s reported shift away from physical discs allegedly caught publishers, regional teams, and retail partners off guard, turning a gamer ownership fight into a business trust problem.

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A PS5 sits on a table with a DualSense standing up next to it.
Giovanni Colantonio / Digital Trends

PlayStation’s reported move away from physical discs already looked bad for players who still care about owning games. Now it sounds messy for the companies expected to sell, support, and build around Sony’s ecosystem.

High Chaos Run reports that Sony’s decision to end physical disc production for PS5, and likely PS6 in 2028, came without warning publishers, business partners, or some regional operations. If accurate, Sony didn’t only create another fight over PlayStation discs. It left parts of its own games business catching up after the decision was already public.

Who learned too late

A digital-first PlayStation future isn’t shocking on its own. The rougher question is why so many partners allegedly found out late.

Publishers were apparently caught off guard despite close working relationships with PlayStation. Partners tied to Sony’s hardware cycle now have a nasty new variable. How do they plan around a platform holder that can change the retail model before warning the people tied to it?

What stores are selling now

The retail contradiction is harder to laugh off. Regional teams were still discussing brick-and-mortar PlayStation store plans with local distributors and investors, including a push in India that could have reached 100 stores by 2028.

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That looks brutal if the disc strategy was already changing behind the curtain. A physical PlayStation store can still sell hardware, accessories, and brand theater. But the pitch gets thinner when one of the biggest reasons to walk into a game store is being phased out.

Why players inherit the fallout

For players, the obvious worry is ownership. A digital-only PlayStation future gives Sony more control over how games are sold and what happens when storefront decisions change later.

The partner backlash makes that control harder to shrug off. When publishers, stores, and regional teams are caught flat-footed, players are seeing the same power imbalance from another angle. Sony’s next explanation needs to be clearer than a quiet shrug, because silence will make the whole thing feel deliberate.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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