
It appears that PlayStation's first-party single-player games will no longer be released on PC in the future.
Following up on his report from last March, Bloomberg's Jason Schreier stated in a social media post that "PlayStation Studios Business CEO Hermen Hulst told staff at a company town hall meeting on Monday that the company's narrative-driven single-player games will be released as PlayStation exclusives."
According to the report, titles such as Ghost of Yōtei, Saros, Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet, and Marvel's Wolverine are expected to remain PlayStation exclusives. However, as Hulst specifically mentioned single-player games, it is possible that online and multiplayer-focused titles may still be released across multiple platforms.
This information follows Bloomberg's report from last March regarding shifts in Sony's PC release strategy. Bloomberg previously reported that Sony was scaling back its plans for PC releases of first-party PS5 games, pivoting away from a multi-platform expansion strategy and back toward a focus on console exclusivity.
In its previous report, Bloomberg analyzed that this change in direction likely stems from concerns that multi-platform releases could damage the console's brand image and negatively impact sales of the PS5 and its successors.
The lackluster performance of single-player games released on the PC platform also appears to have been a factor. While PlayStation has previously brought major single-player titles to PC—including the Spider-Man series, God of War series, Horizon series, Ghost of Tsushima, and The Last of Us—some of these games recorded lower-than-expected sales and player engagement.

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- Soojin "Eonn" Kim
- Email : eonn@inven.co.kr

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