Key Takeaways
- Sony has clarified that physical disc production for existing PlayStation games will continue after January 2028, provided they were released before the cutoff.
- Publishers will still be able to reorder discs for older PlayStation games even after the January 2028 discontinuation of new disc production.
- For new games launching after January 2028, Sony will offer publishers the option to release them with digital codes instead of discs.
The physical media faithful can exhale, at least partially. Sony has quietly reassured game publishers that PlayStation disc games after 2028 will not vanish from production lines entirely, provided those games launched before the company’s January 2028 cutoff date. The clarification, sent to partners through PlayStation’s private developer portal and first reported by journalist Stephen Totilo of Game File, softens the blow of one of the most controversial announcements in recent gaming history. It also comes with a rather significant asterisk that collectors will want to read twice.
In This Article
What Sony Actually Told Publishers
On July 1, Sony Interactive Entertainment publicly announced that physical disc production for all new PlayStation games will be discontinued starting January 2028. The company framed the decision as a natural response to consumer trends, pointing out that digital purchases now significantly outpace physical sales across its ecosystem.
The public blog post left publishers with plenty of questions. The follow-up partner message answers at least one of them. Sony confirmed that publishers will still be able to place reorders for existing PlayStation disc games even after the deadline passes. In practical terms, that means a PS5 game released in late 2027 could still get fresh discs pressed in 2028, 2029, or beyond, as long as the publisher wants to print them.
Read Also: Moto Pad 70 Pro goes on sale for the first time: Pricing and specs details
There is a wrinkle, though. Sony told partners that the ordering process for discs will change in ways it has yet to announce. Industry watchers suspect reprints will become more of an on-demand, specialist affair rather than the large-scale retail runs of today.
New Games Get the Code-in-a-Box Treatment
For anything releasing after January 2028, the disc dream is over. Sony says it will instead provide publishers with the opportunity to release new games at retail using digital codes. Whether those codes arrive inside traditional game boxes, printed on cards like PSN gift vouchers, or in some entirely new format remains unclear.
Gamers already got a preview of this future when Rockstar confirmed that the physical edition of GTA 6 would ship as a download code in a box rather than an actual disc. The backlash was loud, swift, and apparently not loud enough to change Sony’s roadmap.
Why This Matters for Collectors and Preservation
The reprint guarantee carries real consequences. Scalpers hoping that every PS4 and PS5 disc would suddenly become a rare artifact may find their speculative stockpiles worth less than expected, since scarcity is no longer baked in. Publishers can simply print more copies of popular back-catalogue titles whenever demand justifies it.
The bigger picture is harder to ignore. Sony has already consolidated disc manufacturing to a single plant in Salzburg, Austria, which is now retooling much of its capacity toward micro optics production. The company is also shutting down PS3 and PS Vita storefronts, and a Change.org petition urging Sony to reconsider the disc decision has gathered over 45,000 signatures. Meanwhile, the announcement all but confirms that the PlayStation 6 will ship without a disc drive in its base configuration.
Read Also: This Couple Signed a GTA 6 Launch Week Contract and Reddit Has Thoughts
What do we think can happen?
Credit where it is due, the reprint commitment is a genuinely useful concession that protects existing libraries from artificial scarcity. But let us not mistake a comfortable hospice for a cure. Sony has drawn a firm line under three decades of spinning plastic, and everything after January 2028 lives or dies on servers the company controls. For players who equate ownership with something they can hold, lend, or resell, this is less a compromise and more a countdown. Enjoy your discs while the presses are still warm.


