For years, Sony‘s PlayStation platform has mostly held an advantage over
For the record, this is what Sony presented in its 2024 State of Play:
- Monster Hunter Wilds (also available on
Xbox ) - Silent Hill 2 (remake)
- God of War Ragnarok (PC release)
- Until Dawn (remaster/remake)
- Skydance’s Behemoth (VR exclusive)
- Alien: Rogue Incursion (VR exclusive)
- Path of Exile 2 (also available on
Xbox ) - Marvel Rivals (closed beta)
- Dynasty Warriors: Origins (also available on
Xbox ) - Where Winds Meet
- Infinite Nikki
- Ballad of Antara
- Astro Bot
- Concord
Their biggest titles are either remakes or belated PC releases, with Monster Hunter Wilds holding the most promise. Still, even Monster Hunter Wilds will be available on the
We do have some new faces like Concord, an Overwatch clone ready to take the genre’s turbulent throne, and Where Winds Meet, which is a Wuxia action RPG. But none of them evoke the same hype and excitement as Sony’s 2023 State of Play contenders.
For that matter, they also pale in comparison to
- DOOM: The Dark Ages
- S.T.A.L.K.E.R. 2: Heart of Chornobyl
- Avowed
- Indiana Jones and the Great Circle
- Perfect Dark
- Fable
- Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024
- Gears of War E-Day
- State of Decay 3
- FragPunk
Those are just the
So, while Sony is busy pushing its VR gambles and nostalgia-bait remakes,
Even a quick peek at the comment section on PlayStation’s State of Play summary paints a grim picture for Sony, with most of the comments dubbing it as quite possibly the worst State of Play ever.
Granted, Sony had some promising PlayStation exclusives they unveiled in the Summer Game Fest, such as Phantom Blade Zero (though it will also be on PC). But one exclusive Soulslike isn’t enough to turn the tide in the ongoing console war.