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PlayStation (Games) Sony Entertainment Games

Sony Announces Plan To Publish PlayStation Games On Non-PS Consoles (arstechnica.com) 24

Sony has announced plans to launch PlayStation games on "additional console platforms beyond PlayStation platforms as early as 2021." The first announced series for the change is Sony's long-running baseball sim series MLB The Show. Ars Technica reports: The gazillion-dollar question, of course, is which other console platforms we might expect the series to launch on. Neither Sony nor MLB had any answers to that question as of press time. Sony also didn't hint to doing the same thing for any other current PlayStation-exclusive series. Since the series began life in 1998 on PlayStation 1, simply titled MLB '98, Sony's baseball games have launched exclusively on PlayStation platforms -- and, in fact, they've launched on every PlayStation-branded device. While other multi-platform baseball sim series have fallen by the wayside in the years since, most recently 2K Sports' MLB 2K13, Sony's PlayStation-exclusive take on the American pastime has persisted as an annual release.

"Sony" at large has published games on non-PlayStation consoles in recent years, mostly in the form of Sony Music Entertainment's UNTIES entertainment publishing group. But those games are rarely marked with "Sony" or "PlayStation" branding, let alone temporary exclusivity on PlayStation platforms. Today's news marks the first time a series from Sony Interactive Entertainment with loud ties to the PlayStation brand has been announced for other competing consoles.
There are still way more questions than answers: "Might Sony go so far as to launch MLB The Show on Xbox, thus creating a tangled love triangle of who publishes on whose consoles? Or will this become a bizarre move on Sony's part to support Google Stadia, even though Sony has its own complicated sometimes-streaming subscription service? And either way, how far might Sony and the MLB milk this cloud of mystery, assuming that 'as early as 2021' could mean one, two, or even 4,000 years later?"
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Sony Announces Plan To Publish PlayStation Games On Non-PS Consoles

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  • by BoogieChile ( 517082 ) on Tuesday December 10, 2019 @10:05PM (#59506470)
    I wouldn't mind being able to play Grand Turismo 7 on my SLI-rigged 3-screened battlestation at 5760x1200
    • You would if you found out it was only streaming the game, and doesn't take full advantage of your multi-thousand dollar hardware. I hope you have Fiber internet.
    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Texture size and 5K to 8K ready art quality :)
    • by Saffaya ( 702234 )

      Would you mind telling us what is the state of support for SLI/CrossFire by games nowadays ?
      I do use a triple-screen set-up, but lies^H^H^H^H unfulfilled promises of SLI/CrossFire support by some games have dampen my enthusiasm.

  • what about baning exclusively?? Will cloud force that or will some games become say ATT or comcast only?

  • Microsoft is planning the "game pass" on the Nintendo handhelds, and Nintendo is publishing (streamlined) Mario games on mobile phones. The older game sale methods do not seem to work, so it is logical for Sony to explore additional options to make money.

    I would still expect the "console sellers" like God of War to stay exclusive, however tie-ins like Spiderman could have a chance on other platforms. Given Sony no longer has a active handheld, and their phone marketshare is not large, it might make sense to

    • by samdu ( 114873 ) <samdu AT ronintech DOT com> on Wednesday December 11, 2019 @02:42AM (#59506912) Homepage

      "The older game sale methods do not seem to work..."

      Based on what, exactly?

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Microsoft is planning the "game pass" on the Nintendo handhelds, and Nintendo is publishing (streamlined) Mario games on mobile phones. The older game sale methods do not seem to work, so it is logical for Sony to explore additional options to make money.

      I would still expect the "console sellers" like God of War to stay exclusive, however tie-ins like Spiderman could have a chance on other platforms. Given Sony no longer has a active handheld, and their phone marketshare is not large, it might make sense to

  • by DrXym ( 126579 ) on Wednesday December 11, 2019 @05:03AM (#59507082)
    It largely doesn't matter what hardware is running on the cloud end. It could be a server room full of consoles, PCs, supercomputers it doesn't matter. Stadia or something like it could potentially host games from every console and home computer past and present if it had the rights to them.

    On the client side the thing that matters is the controller and low latency streaming. Beyond that the client could be a computer, a console, a flatscreen TV, it doesn't matter.

    I think the last one matters quite a lot. I reckon many "smart" TVs will start acquiring the ability to stream games from the cloud and the age of fat consoles may diminish in favour of cloud subscription services. So there is going to be a lot of deal making going on behind the scenes. The streaming service with the most content is likely to be the one that wins.

    • by Ranbot ( 2648297 )

      ...running on the cloud end.... On the client side the thing that matters is the controller and low latency streaming. Beyond that the client could be....a flatscreen TV....I reckon many "smart" TVs will start acquiring the ability to stream games from the cloud...

      I would reckon that too. Also note Sony is the only game console company with a very significant flat screen TV manufacturing business. Sony probably sells TVs for a profit too, whereas game consoles are often sold as loss-leaders. They would probably like to skip that loss-leader step.

  • by Thruen ( 753567 ) on Wednesday December 11, 2019 @07:44AM (#59507266)
    The headline here makes it sound as if Sony announced they're developing some meaningful number of their games for cross-platform releases. They didn't, it's just one game, and considering it's their MLB licensed game and the announcement came alongside them renewing their deal with the MLB, odds are it's not Sony pushing for this. As this article states, Sony has actually developed games for other platforms in the past, just under a different name. While the situation could one day change, this announcement does not mean what the headline suggests.
    • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

      Well its an erosion of what for a brief time had become a near impenetrable bulwark in terms of certain properties being tied to specific hardware etc.

      Things are happening. You have companies like Google and Amazon now experimenting with 'streaming games' in the wider market place, you have companies that have not traditionally been in the games market like facebook leading the VR hardware charge, you have services like steam popularizing PC gaming again and forcing more competition with the 'back catalog'.

  • Great! One more way to ignore SONY's business after them being assholes. Multiple times and in several ways.

I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning. -- Plato

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