As the physical vs digital debate rages on, fueled by GTA 6‘s lack of discs, Sony and PlayStation have once again reminded their players that you own nothing after removing 551 movies after a licensing deal expired. PlayStation users are thus expressing outrage, as they have paid for the movies that the PS Store will permanently delete from customers’ digital libraries later this year, with no indication that affected buyers will receive refunds.
The company recently notified users that 551 StudioCanal-distributed titles will disappear from PlayStation accounts on September 1, 2026, due to the expiration of a content licensing agreement. Once the deadline arrives, customers who paid for the films through the PlayStation Store will lose access to them entirely. The message did not mention refunds, store credit, or any other form of compensation, fueling widespread criticism online.
The list of affected titles includes major films such as Terminator 2: Judgment Day, Total Recall, Rambo: First Blood, Bridget Jones’s Diary, The Deer Hunter, Hot Fuzz, Train to Busan, Paddington, Moonlight, and Pan’s Labyrinth. Several television series, including Versailles and Baron Noir, are also set to disappear. The announcement quickly reignited the long-running debate over digital ownership, with many arguing that the incident proves customers are purchasing licenses rather than permanent copies.
“This should be an automatic refund. We need laws that spell this out,” one user wrote, while another questioned, “Are they gonna refund everyone who bought these movies? Is this not stealing?” PlayStation’s decision also reignited support for physical media. “This is why I buy physical,” one popular response read, while another mocked growing acceptance of digital-only releases by writing, “‘WhO cArEs iF GTA VI iS DiGiTaL oNlY.'”
A grim reminder for digital media
Sony actually stopped selling movies and television shows through the PlayStation Store in 2021, but buyers retained access to content they had already purchased. This time, it’s different. The upcoming removal represents one of the largest digital content purges on the platform to date. Others have thus suggested that Sony could have transferred customers’ purchases to another platform instead of deleting them outright.
Certain social media users argued the move only encourages piracy. “That’s one of the reasons why piracy exists,” one commenter wrote. Another added, “If I can’t own it, then sailing the high seas is not stealing it either,” reflecting frustration over the limitations of digital purchases. Interestingly enough, the same ownership intricacies also apply to video games.
Most video games bought through digital storefronts are actually just a limited, revocable license to access and play the game. Even a storefront as big as Steam has reminded its customers of this fact. Once servers or the business shut down, or an overarching licensing deal expires, as happened to StudioCanal-distributed titles, then customers lose access to that media.







