
This week’s Sony Investor Day wasn’t just another earnings call—it was a full-throttle, 360° look at how PlayStation plans to dominate the next console generation. From beefy financial targets to jaw-dropping game Sony Investor Day 2025: Powering PlayStation’s Next Chapter.
On June 13, Sony laid out its long-term PlayStation game plan—teasing future hardware, celebrating PlayStation 5’s momentum, doubling down on services, and fine-tuning its content strategy. Here’s what matters most for gamers and investors alike.
Future Platforms: PS6 “Top of Mind”
Sony’s leadership confirmed that the next PlayStation console is firmly on the drawing board, with development targeting a 2028 earliest launch. While cloud gaming remains an “additional option,” Sony believes most players still crave “local execution” on dedicated hardware. That conviction underpins a “multi-faceted platform” approach—iterative upgrades and a new console generation designed for backwards compatibility, high performance, and fresh ways to engage with content and services.
PS5 Overtakes PS4: A Multi-Generational Ecosystem
For the first time since PS5’s November 2020 debut, it now boasts more monthly active users than PS4. Combined, Sony’s platforms reach 124 million monthly players—up from 97 million a year ago. Hideaki Nishino emphasizes that while PS5 offers the “best way” to experience PlayStation content, the PS4 remains a vital access point for millions, cementing Sony’s multi-generational strategy.
Even after global and local price hikes in FY 2023 and FY 2024, higher service tiers continue to grow. In FY 2024, PS Plus Premium and Extra together represent roughly 38 percent of all subscribers—up from 30 percent in FY 2022. Sony will keep dynamically adjusting pricing and piling on value—new content, personalized features, and enhanced discovery—to maximize profitability.
Ports with Purpose: Thoughtful PC Strategy And About the Switch 2
PlayStation Studios boss Hermen Hulst reaffirmed a “very measured, very deliberate” approach to PC ports. Tentpole single-player franchises are staggered—often arriving on PC at least a year after PS5—to preserve console value and showcase hardware performance. Meanwhile, live-service and multiplayer titles may see day-one PC support to grow communities without diluting console exclusivity.
With Nintendo’s Switch 2 off to a record-breaking start, Sony isn’t fazed. Nishino argues that “PS5-level performance is required to achieve a great experience on big screens,” a nod to DualSense haptics, advanced graphics, and stable 4K output. While multi-platform releases are inevitable, PlayStation’s mission remains “to be the best place to play and publish,” delivering immersive, high-fidelity experiences on the living-room TV.