Bad news for fans of physical media: Sony has announced that it is abandoning game discs.
In a blog post published Wednesday, Sid Shuman, senior director of global content communications at PlayStation, wrote that from January 2028, “physical game disc production for all new games releasing on PlayStation consoles will be discontinued.” Shuman added that the decision is down to “consumer preferences” and the broader entertainment industry shifting away from physical discs to digital, and that he feels “this is a natural direction for Sony Interactive Entertainment to adapt to consumer trends as the general preference for digital media significantly outpaces physical discs.”
The blog is a mere three paragraphs but raises several questions about Sony’s decision and its impact across the console gaming industry going forward. The main one that many gamers are likely leaping to, though, is “What is Sony thinking?”
Sizing Errors
Sony’s decision does have some merit. The vast majority of video game sales—across the entire industry, not just PlayStation—are digital downloads. There’s a convenience to being able to buy, install, and play from your couch that even online shopping for a physical copy cannot match. A digital-first approach also expands the market for smaller developers and publishers, who can deliver their games to players without worrying about the added cost and stress of production or distribution.
At the other end of the industry, many “triple-A” games are now bigger, in file size, than can fit onto a physical disc in the first place. A triple-layer 4K Blu-ray can hold 100 GB of data; for games already exceeding this limit, the “on disc” release is usually a bearer token or installation pack for the digital edition. There’s no viable successor disc format, and even if there were, speed matters too—a solid-state drive can load and run a game much faster than data read from an optical disc. Maintaining disc releases when they no longer meet the needs of gaming as a medium is a bit of a fool’s errand, especially as Valve’s Steam Machine is about to make an all-digital claim to players’ living room gaming time.
However, there is also backlash against an all-digital future for the medium. The much-anticipated Grand Theft Auto VI has made waves over the past week after developer Rockstar Games confirmed it would only arrive as a digital release, and “physical” copies would contain only a download code. While Rockstar’s decision is probably down to all those issues with getting a massive game onto discs in 2026, the furor shows there is still demand for physical releases.
Who Owns Your Games?
At the moment, the move has a whiff of Microsoft’s disastrous reveal of the Xbox One in 2013. Back then, it planned to effectively neuter the secondary market by locking discs to specific consoles. Under the earliest iterations of the plans, once you’d installed the game you’d bought, the disc itself became a glorified coaster—trading it in, reselling it, or even returning it would have been so laborious and bureaucratic that it became unfeasible. The move was hugely unpopular, and Microsoft was forced to backtrack. Sony canning discs entirely risks making the same mistake.
It also raises questions over content ownership without a hard copy. We’re already seeing problems with digital purchases through PlayStation’s storefronts. PlayStation recently announced it plans to remove more than 550 Studio Canal titles from the digital libraries of British consumers starting September 1, due to content licensing agreements. It is at least the second time such a removal has happened.
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