Sony Says It Will Keep Printing Discs After 2028, But There’s a Catch

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Published Jul 4, 2026, 8:39 PM EDT

Tay Garcia is a Contributor at DualShockers and a Brazilian journalist who has been covering games professionally since 2017. Her work spans news, reviews, previews, lists, guides, and features, with a particular focus on horror, retro games, theories, puzzle games, Metroidvanias, Soulslikes, and story-driven titles.

Before joining DualShockers, Tay worked as an assistant editor and contributed to Jovem Nerd, one of Brazil’s largest pop culture outlets, as well as Editora Europa, a major Brazilian publisher known for gaming and technology magazines. She has also worked as a streamer, YouTube creator, and podcaster. Tay holds a B.A. in Journalism, has postgraduate training in Social Media, and is certified in professional video game journalism. She was also a member of Podcast UP, which won the Cubo de Ouro Award for Best Podcast in Brazil in 2021.

When looking at the shifting tides of the gaming industry, few topics spark as much fiery passion and anxiety as the ongoing battle over physical media.

For decades, collecting physical cases, sliding a disc into a console drive, and proudly displaying a game library on a shelf has been a fundamental part of the core gaming identity for many players (including myself). However, as digital storefronts continue to dominate sales charts and corporate executives push for more streamlined ecosystems, the threat of an all-digital future has steadily evolved from a distant corporate dream into a looming reality.

And this was literally confirmed by PlayStation, as they dropped a midweek bombshell announcement revealing that it will completely halt physical disc production for new PS games starting in January 2028. Naturally, physical media lovers and collector's edition enthusiasts from all around the world experienced a collective meltdown.

However, while social media platforms quickly snowballed into a chaotic frenzy of outrage and confusion, a deeper look into the technical fine print of Sony’s corporate message reveals a slightly more complicated scenario – one that came with a very specific, rather bittersweet catch.

The Corporate Loophole for Legacy Titles

Sony Says It Will Keep Printing Discs After 2028 But Theres a Catch 2

As it turns out, the messaging behind this historic digital transition was delivered slightly differently behind closed doors to PlayStation’s extensive array of global development and publishing partners (thanks for the info, Game File!).

While the headline gave the distinct impression that factories would permanently shutter and lock their doors come 2028, Sony made a point of explicitly clarifying a major exception to the rule: games originally released or planned prior to the January 2028 deadline will still be legally eligible to receive physical disc printings after that date.

"This transition has no impact on games that already released, or will be releasing, prior to January 2028 in disc format," Sony noted in a follow-up post on the PlayStation Blog shortly after the main announcement, assuring publishers that older catalog titles won't abruptly vanish from retail store shelves.

Basically, this means that if an acclaimed RPG or a modern multiplayer shooter launches in physical format during late 2026 or 2027, the publisher can comfortably request subsequent retail restocks and additional disc manufacturing runs well into 2028 and beyond.

Sony made a point of explicitly clarifying a major exception to the rule

The strict manufacturing shutdown applies purely to entirely new software projects embarking on their initial market releases after the cutoff date. While that technicality provides a small silver lining for game availability, it does very little to calm the rising nerves of creative teams inside the industry, serving as a clear setup for the slow death of physical media starting in 2028.

Either way, it seems that the countdown to PlayStation's all-digital era has officially begun, and the physical medium's days are now numbered for any future generational blockbusters. Personally, I'm definitely saddened by this entire corporate shift, especially since it truly forces us to cherish every single physical copy we can grab from now on before the industry changes forever – I mean, I'm already hugging all the steelbooks and collector's editions on my shelf really hard. Whether you love the tactile feel of a physical case or simply care about keeping history alive, the next couple of years are going to be a crucial turning point for how we buy and hold onto our favorite games.

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