![]() ![]() ![]() As we’ve previously heard, this highest tier will include extend demos & streaming games from the cloud. However, the rumoured service will apparently include a third, higher tier at the most expensive level. That service has seen games like Halo Infinite and Forza Horizon 5 both arrive on their respective launch days directly into subscriber’s libraries. First party big-name games have been arguably a key factor to competitor Xbox Game Pass’ success. That includes, according to one person familiar with the plan, this year’s highly anticipated launch of God of War: Ragnarok. One additional thing that is worth noting, is that the report claims the service won’t necessarily include first party games on launch. To catch you up, the new service will combine both PlayStation Plus and PlayStation Now into a single, tiered, service. According to these anonymous sources, the service will debut with a “splashy lineup of hit games from recent years”. That’s according to Bloomberg, citing who it calls “people familiar with the plans”. Microsoft’s xCloud game streaming service became widely available earlier this year.Reports are claiming that Sony could be looking to introduce their new subscription service, codenamed PlayStation Spartacus, later this week. Sony is also putting resources into expanding its efforts in cloud gaming, the people familiar with the plans said. Xbox has also made big acquisitions, such as Bethesda Softworks last year for $7.5 billion, with the goal of bolstering the Game Pass library. Xbox has built its overall strategy around the service in recent years, putting all of its internally published games on Game Pass as soon as they’re released. It allows users to pay $10 to $15 a month for unlimited access to several hundred games. Microsoft’s Game Pass, which is often dubbed the Netflix of video games, has more than 18 million subscribers. With this new structure, Sony will look to compete with an Xbox feature that has been popular and lucrative. A representative for PlayStation didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.Īlthough the PlayStation has outsold the Xbox in recent years, Sony has lagged behind Microsoft on the subscription front. The third tier would add extended demos, game streaming and a library of classic PS1, PS2, PS3 and PSP games. The second would offer a large catalog of PlayStation 4 and, eventually, PlayStation 5 games. The first would include existing PlayStation Plus benefits. Documents reviewed by Bloomberg suggest that Sony plans to retain the PlayStation Plus branding but phase out PlayStation Now.ĭetails on Spartacus may still not be finalized, but documentation reviewed by Bloomberg outlines a service with three tiers. Currently, PlayStation Plus is required for most online multiplayer games and offers free monthly titles, while PlayStation Now allows users to stream or download older games. When it launches, expected in the spring, the service will merge Sony’s two existing subscription plans, PlayStation Plus and PlayStation Now. The offering will likely be available on the smash hit PlayStation 4, which has sold more than 116 million units, and its elusive successor, the PlayStation 5, which launched more than a year ago but is still difficult to buy due to supply chain issues. The service, code-named Spartacus, will allow PlayStation owners to pay a monthly fee for access to a catalog of modern and classic games, said the people, who asked not to be identified because they weren’t authorized to speak to the press about the plans. (Bloomberg) - Sony Group Corp.’s PlayStation division is planning a new subscription service to compete with rival Microsoft Corp.’s popular Xbox Game Pass, according to people familiar with Sony’s plans and documents reviewed by Bloomberg. ![]()
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