In surprising news, Sony has announced it would cease production of recordable Blu-ray discs and its other consumer physical media by February 2025. Aside from Blu-ray, it includes MiniDiscs and MiniDV cassettes as well, and no ‘successor models’ is planned for release. However, recordable discs are consumer-oriented products; the PlayStation maker will still sell Blu-rays and other storage media for business. Nevertheless, the announcement has raised concerns about the future of physical games, especially with looming economic factors and declining demand.
It doesn’t help that console manufacturers seem to be pushing the idea of ditching physical media. Microsoft basically started the movement, which made headlines when it launched the digital-only Xbox One S in 2018. Fast forward to this generation, Sony’s current flagship console’s upgrade, the PlayStation 5 Pro, was also launched to the market lacking a disc drive.
Game industry analyst Matt Piscatella highlighted further challenges facing physical media in a post on Bluesky. He noted that President Trump’s 25% tariffs on Mexican imports could drastically reduce disc-based game releases in the US. Considering much of the production infrastructure of said product is based in Mexico. Even if manufacturers move production to the US, the costs would skyrocket, further discouraging physical game sales.
Physical game spending in the US has already halved since 2021, according to Piscatella. With production costs increasing and demand plummeting, there’s little incentive to invest in sustaining physical media.
“[…] Were this to happen, anticipate digital MSRPs to increase to remain at price parity with physical, but who knows,” he wrote. “In any case, none of this is good for the physical video game market.”
Rockstar Games’ highly anticipated GTA 6 might also be another harbinger of these rising costs. Analysts predict the game could easily debut at $80 or even $100, marking yet another price hike for AAA titles.
Despite the business side continuing, Sony’s decision to halt consumer Blu-ray discs production feels like another nail in the coffin for physical gaming. This shift might leave consumers paying more for less, as digital-only games often lack tangible bonuses and benefits like manuals and a sense of ownership. After all, for decades, collecting rows of cartridges and discs has always been a source of pride for gamers around the world.