Continue reading this on our app for a better experience

Open in App
Floating Button
Home News Company in the news

Sony sparks debate by pricing new PlayStation well above Xbox

Bloomberg
Bloomberg • 3 min read
Sony sparks debate by pricing new PlayStation well above Xbox
Sony’s PlayStation 5 has sold more than 59 million units since its release in 2020 but has lagged slightly behind its predecessor, the PlayStation 4. Photo: Bloomberg
Font Resizer
Share to Whatsapp
Share to Facebook
Share to LinkedIn
Scroll to top
Follow us on Facebook and join our Telegram channel for the latest updates.

Sony Group priced a faster version of the PlayStation 5 well above its rival Xbox at US$700 ($910.97), suggesting the entertainment giant sees a loyal audience willing to pay a premium for top performance.

The Japanese company unveiled the surprisingly high price tag when it announced the start of sales Nov 7, which will come just weeks after the latest version of Microsoft’s competing console hits store shelves. Between them, Sony and Microsoft are moving into rarefied air for consoles, with the new Xbox Series X costing US$600 and the upgraded PS5 Pro asking US$200 more than the original.

Four years into their respective life cycles, the two most popular home consoles are moving up the value chain. Analysts were divided on whether the pricing would spur sales for Sony, which is trying to expand its entertainment business with original, high-quality content spanning games, anime and film.

“This is about Sony skimming the absolute top end of the market, targeting hardcore PlayStation users only,” industry analyst Serkan Toto said. “It’s not a mass-market device. It seems the entire gaming world is puzzled about Sony’s pricing strategy.”

Others saw the move as an attempt to prop up margins. The pricing decision follows a series of price hikes in Japan, which experts viewed as a response to the growing cost of components such as chips.

The new, high-end console will allow PlayStation 5 games to be played at higher resolutions and faster frame-rates without the need to toggle between different modes, Mark Cerny, lead architect of the console, said in a video presentation. He said the PlayStation 5 Pro will offer 45% faster rendering than the standard PlayStation 5. 

See also: Yangzijiang Shipbuilding subsidiaries have ‘reasonably good prospect of success’ in arbitration claims

“The pricing seems extremely challenging, since there has never been a game console whose successor model was substantially more expensive than the original,” Citi analyst Kota Ezawa wrote. “We surmise that the components responsible for the improved performance of the PS5 Pro are not all that much more expensive than the components in the original PS5, and thus we expect the higher price of the PS5 Pro to boost the gross margin.”

Sony’s PlayStation 5 has sold more than 59 million units since its release in 2020 but has lagged slightly behind its predecessor, the PlayStation 4. The increased cost may limit its audience, in part because it moves the machine closer to the cost of a full gaming PC, perennially the biggest rival to standalone game consoles.

Many reviewers noted the new device’s higher price tag despite the lack of a disc drive, reflecting an ongoing video-game industry trend that has seen customers switch from physical media to online services. A disc drive will be available for purchase separately.

See also: Boeing to cut workforce by 10% as strike eats into reserves

In a blog post, the company said that the new console will improve the performance of older titles and that “several games will be patched with free software updates for gamers to take advantage of PS5 Pro’s features” including Hogwarts Legacy, Final Fantasy VII Rebirth and Spider-Man 2.

“Simply put, it’s the most powerful console we’ve ever built,” Cerny said.

×
The Edge Singapore
Download The Edge Singapore App
Google playApple store play
Keep updated
Follow our social media
© 2024 The Edge Publishing Pte Ltd. All rights reserved.