PS5 moves nearly 94 million units as Sony looks toward PS6

PS5

The PlayStation 5 is clearly entering a different phase of its life cycle now. The massive launch shortages are long gone, most early adopters already own one, and naturally, hardware sales are starting to cool off a bit. But interestingly, Sony’s latest financial results show that PlayStation as a business is still doing pretty well overall.

In its fiscal year 2025 earnings report, Sony revealed that the PS5 has now reached 93.7 million units shipped worldwide. That’s still an enormous number, especially considering how difficult the console’s early years were because of supply shortages.

For the full fiscal year, Sony shipped around 16 million PS5 consoles. That’s lower than the previous year’s 18.5 million, but it still managed to beat Sony’s own internal expectations by roughly 1 million units. So while growth is slowing, the console is continuing to perform steadily.

The bigger slowdown showed up during the January to March 2026 quarter, where PS5 shipments dropped to around 1.5 million units. Reports suggest that’s roughly a 45% year-over-year decline, which sounds dramatic at first, but honestly, it’s fairly normal for a console entering the later stages of its generation.

Source: Sony Investor Relations

What’s keeping PlayStation strong right now isn’t necessarily hardware anymore, it’s everything surrounding it. Sony reported 125 million monthly active users across PlayStation services, which is actually slightly higher than last year. Software sales also remained solid, while subscriptions and network services like PlayStation Plus continue becoming increasingly important to the business.

That shift is pretty obvious in the financials. Even with weaker hardware numbers and the massive Bungie-related impairment losses Sony recorded this year, the Game & Network Services division still posted higher operating income overall. In other words, PlayStation is making more money through its ecosystem rather than relying purely on console sales.

Sony also gave a small glimpse into the future. For fiscal year 2026, the company expects hardware sales to decline further, but surprisingly predicts operating profits to rise significantly. Part of that comes from continued service growth, while another part appears tied to early investments into the next generation of PlayStation hardware.

Sony didn’t directly say “PS6” of course, but the company openly mentioned increased investment into its next-generation platform preparations. So behind the scenes, it’s pretty clear the transition toward the next console era is already starting.

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