310°

PlayStation Studios Is Preparing to Invest Big in New IP

By the end of the 2025 financial year, 50% of Sony's investment into its PlayStation Studios will go towards the creation of brand new IPs.

brewin1113d ago

I dream of a time like the SNES era where one-off games were the norm. No sequels. No reboots. Every new game felt like a new game. I'm not against sequels or anything like that. What I hate is when theres 4- 5 sequels then a reboot with 3 sequels. Let's get some new new up in here it's starting to feel stale 💯✌️

CrimsonWing691113d ago

Long gone are those days. Back then it was a huge milestone if you sold a million copies of a game. Nowadays you’re a flop if you sell a million copies. The thing is nobody is willing to take the financial risk. The industry now chases trends or forces monetization with little development cost into a game.

I was just talking about this with a buddy of mine and the SNES to PS2 era really was the golden age of gaming in terms of originality and variety.

jBlakeeper1113d ago

Gaming is far too expensive nowadays to even take risks so we get a lot of similar games now. Just like the movie industry. Remakes and sequels.

CantThinkOfAUsername1113d ago

The industry spent the entire PS3/XBOX360 era experimenting and taking risks (as well as copy-catting), it rarely paid off. So many weird games and so many different genres that never succeeded commercially.

Let's hypothetically say that you have $100M to invest into making a game, how much risk are you willing to take and what guarantees that it'll find success?

shinoff21831112d ago

@cantthinkofausername

I dont really follow. The ps3 and 360 gen is when it started. We were oversaturated with so many fps and copycat games. I personally feel its getting a little better. Indies are also stepping up to a degree.

I feel the ps4 gen was way better in terms of games taking chances compared to ps3 360 gen. Itll only get better to with more indie devs actually getting some resources etc. Im pretty pumped. Weve always had sequels though theyve been around from the nes era.

neutralgamer19921113d ago (Edited 1113d ago )

Brewin

Awesome let's go push the industry forward. I am not against sequels at all but I am also for some one off games

Issue is the development cost/initial investment to establish the IP. When a publisher spends 100-150 million than we have to realize they have more games planned. I am sure in few years time we will get sequel for days gone, the order 1886 etc. If a game is recieved poorly than just let it sit and many time these games become cult classics

1112d ago Replies(2)
S2Killinit1112d ago (Edited 1112d ago )

Not saying this is you, but Im always suprised by people who want new, but arent on board with VR gaming.

Personally, Im ecstatic with whats about to come with PSVR2. The 20 new launch games will be amazing.

+ Show (1) more replyLast reply 1112d ago
IMissJimRyan1113d ago

Yes! They are going to expand. Sony will be really different in 2025:

- 50% old IP / 50% new IP
- 50% consoles / 50% PC/Mobile

It'll be crazy and nobody could believe that in 2015.

brewin1113d ago

They made so much money off PC, it really doesn't make sense to not release day and date on PC. While we argue about Xbox vs PlayStation, PC players with high end rigs get the best of both. The market is changing so much and the main consoles are so similar, we may be closer to the "one console" market than we realize.

fr0sty1113d ago (Edited 1113d ago )

Sony is still sneaking exotic hardware into their consoles... the custom HDD with speeds modern PCs still struggle to keep up with, the 3d audio, the controller (granted, the controller could work on other platforms too)...

PitbullMonster1113d ago

Lol, God of war didn't even sell one million copies on PC.

Viljong1113d ago

Pc gaming is in worst state than ever. Been playing since late 90s and pc has lost almoust everything which made it best back in the day. Not to speak about horrible price to performance ratio these days.

1113d ago
Aloymetal1113d ago

Exactly what I wanted to hear, just keep doing what you've been doing for the past 25 years.

-Foxtrot1113d ago

Long as it's not live service then I'm in

Single Player FTW

ClayRules20121113d ago

YES! PlayStation+Single Player is the place to play for rich and powerful storytelling.

Power to the player.

EvertonFC1113d ago

They'll do all types of games, live service included. I don't like live service but you have to move with the times also regardless what you like and don't like.

porkChop1113d ago

Well we know PS has at least 10 live service games releasing by 2026. Obviously Sony will still release single player games though as that's where they excel. I don't see them ever stopping that.

blackblades1113d ago

They gonna do both, I don't know why people complaining about it. They acting like Sony is ditching single player which time and tine they said single player is important etc.

jBlakeeper1113d ago

I can once they release those live service games and if they become huge hits with full support. Believe it or not Sony is only trying to make money. They don’t care about continuing to give you single player games. That’s just what has been making them money up to this point. Once the live service games start replacing that revenue then they will phase them out over time.

1112d ago
shinoff21831112d ago

Gotta be single player. Everything goes multiplayer one day. Ill die a retro gamer

S2Killinit1112d ago

Well, luckily Playstation is doing both so no worries there.

+ Show (4) more repliesLast reply 1112d ago
MIDGETonSTILTS171113d ago

Make one of em multiplayer focused ;)

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80°

Inside the ‘Dragon Age’ Debacle That Gutted EA’s BioWare Studio

The latest game in BioWare’s fantasy role-playing series went through ten years of development turmoil

In early November, on the eve of the crucial holiday shopping season, staffers at the video-game studio BioWare were feeling optimistic. After an excruciating development cycle, they had finally released their latest game, Dragon Age: The Veilguard, and the early reception was largely positive. The role-playing game was topping sales charts on Steam, and solid, if not spectacular, reviews were rolling in.

HyperMoused1d 1h ago

Its easy they called the die hard fans people in their nerd caves who will buy anything and then went woke to reach modern audiences....insulting the nerds in their caves along the way showing utter contempt for their fan base. very hapy it failed and any company who insults their fan base and treat their customers with contempt and insults, in future, i also hope fail.

neutralgamer199221h ago

It’s disappointing but not surprising to see what's happening with Dragon Age: The Veilguard and the broader situation at BioWare. The layoffs are tragic — no one wants to see talented developers lose their jobs. But when studios repeatedly create games that alienate their own fanbase, outcomes like this become unfortunately predictable.

There’s a pattern we’re seeing far too often: beloved franchises are revived, only to be reshaped into something almost unrecognizable. Changes are made that no one asked for, often at the expense of what originally made these games special. Then, when long-time fans express concern or lose interest, they’re told, “This game might not be for you.” But when those same fans heed that advice and don’t buy the game, suddenly they're labeled as toxic, sexist, bigoted, or worse.

Let’s be clear: the overwhelming majority of gamers have no issue with diversity, LGBTQ+ representation, or strong female leads. In fact, some of the most iconic characters in gaming — like Aloy, Ellie, or FemShep — are proof that inclusivity and excellent storytelling can and do go hand in hand. The issue arises when diversity feels performative, forced, or disconnected from the narrative — when characters or themes are inserted not to serve the story, but to satisfy a corporate DEI checklist. Audiences can tell the difference.

When studios chase approval from a vocal minority that often doesn’t even buy games — while simultaneously dismissing loyal fans who actually do — they risk not just the success of individual titles, but the health of their entire studio. Telling your core customers “don’t buy it if you don’t like it” is not a viable business strategy. Because guess what? Many of us won’t. And when the game fails commercially, blaming those very fans for not supporting it is both unfair and self-defeating.

Gamers aren’t asking for less diversity or less progress. We’re asking for better writing, thoughtful character development, and a respect for the franchises we’ve supported for decades. When you give people great games that speak to them — whether they’re old fans or new players — they will show up. But if you keep making games for people who don’t play them, don’t be surprised when those who do stop showing up

Armaggedon15h ago

I thought the writing and character development were fine. Sometimes things just dont resonate with people.

90°

Report: Just Cause 5 Was in Development at Sumo Digital, But Got Cancelled

Recent evidence we discovered indicates that the next game in the Just Cause series may have been canceled, potentially two years ago.

RaidenBlack3d ago

NOooooooooooooooooooooo....... ..............

mkis0072d ago

Well if it went back to being more like 3 I would have liked it. 4 was crap.

280°

Bend Studio Reportedly Lays Off 30 Percent of Staff Following Live-Service Project Cancellation

Sony's Bend Studio lays off 30 percent of its workforce following the cancellation of its live-service project.

Read Full Story >>
twistedvoxel.com
Jin_Sakai3d ago

And to think we could’ve been playing Days Gone 2 by now.

RaidenBlack3d ago

I would even pay 80 bucks for an UE5 based more immersive Days Gone 2 .... or even a new Syphon Filter.
But nah .... rather lay off staff & re-remasters Days Gone i.e Days Gone Reloaded.

Cacabunga2d ago (Edited 2d ago )

Stubborn Sony not wanting to listen to fans is paying the price of its arrogance. They could have let these studios grow and do what they do best and let others like Bungie maybe make gaas for those who want it.

Days Gone 2 is obviously what they should focus on next. We’ve had enough remasters and reeditions of the first one

Profchaos2d ago

Sony's not paying the price its workers are.

z2g2d ago

They were listening to the money that games like Fortnite were pulling in. Market research shows service games when successful make more money. It’s a gamble that Sony was too cocky to worry about. Now ppl are losing their jobs in an economy that’s gonna slow down any minute.

gerbintosh1d 22h ago

@Profchaos

The workers let go were probably hired for the live service game and released now because it was cancelled

jznrpg2d ago

People needed to buy the first game! And not at 20$

neutralgamer19922d ago

I understand the argument that if fans truly wanted a sequel to Days Gone, they should've supported it at launch at full price. But that perspective misses a lot of important context.

First of all, Days Gone launched in a broken state. It needed several patches just to become stable and playable. For many gamers, paying $60 for something clearly unfinished just wasn’t justifiable. That wasn’t a lack of support—it was a fair response to a product that didn’t meet expectations out of the gate.

Despite that, over 8 million people eventually bought the game. It built a strong, passionate fanbase—proof that the game had value and potential once it was properly patched. A sequel would’ve had a much stronger foundation: a team that had learned from the first game, a loyal audience, and way more hype around a continued story.

But Days Gone also had to contend with another challenge—it was unfairly judged against other first-party PlayStation exclusives. Critics compared it directly to polished, masterful experiences like Uncharted, The Last of Us, and God of War. And while those comparisons might make sense from a branding perspective, they didn’t reflect the reality of the situation.

Studios like Naughty Dog and Santa Monica Studio had years—sometimes decades—of experience working with big teams and high budgets on flagship titles. Days Gone was Sony Bend Studio’s first major AAA console release in a very long time—their last being Syphon Filter back in the PS1 era. Before that, they were mostly focused on handheld games. Expecting them to match the output of the most elite studios in the industry, right out of the gate, was unrealistic and frankly unfair.

The harsh critical reception didn’t reflect the potential Days Gone actually had, and it probably played a big role in Sony's decision not to greenlight a sequel. Instead, they pushed Bend and other talented studios like Bluepoint toward live service projects—chasing trends instead of trusting the kinds of games their fans consistently show up for. Many of those live service games have since been canceled, likely wasting hundreds of millions of dollars and valuable time that could’ve gone toward meaningful single-player experiences.

So when people say, “You should’ve bought Days Gone at launch if you wanted a sequel,” they’re ignoring the bigger picture. Gamers didn’t reject the game—they waited for it to be worth their time. And once it was, they absolutely showed up. That should’ve been seen as a foundation to build on, not a reason to walk away from the franchise

InUrFoxHole1d 19h ago

@neutralgamer1992
Has a point. I supported this game day 1. There was either and audio sync issue or a cut scene issue that ruined the game for me early on. I dont blame gamers at all for holding off until it meets their standard.

raWfodog2d ago

I seriously wonder who makes these types of decisions. Days Gone was a solid game. It didn't get that much love at first but people eventually saw the diamond in the rough. The ending basically guaranteed a sequel, but someone said "nope, let's pitch a LS game instead". And the yes-men were all "Great idea, sir!!"

+ Show (1) more replyLast reply 1d 19h ago
-Foxtrot3d ago

Urgh. Jim Ryan’s sh***y GaaS plans still ripple across their studios even today.

Such a shame, they should have just been allowed to make Days Gone 2.

Sony need to truly let go of their live service plans once and for all.

OMNlPOTENT2d ago

Agreed. I think the live service era is dead. Even titans like Destiny are starting to fall apart. Sony needs to shift their focus back to their single player games.

ABizzel12d ago (Edited 2d ago )

I don’t think the GaaS overall was a bad idea they’ve seen the success of others, however, forcing all your studios to focus on it was absolutely insane.

Those kind of games are backed by hundreds if not thousands over 1,000 developers working on those games year-round even after release for continuous new content monthly, quarterly, and huge annual or bi-annual updates. It was stupid to expect taking your single-player focused studios and have them become GaaS focused studios when many of them have skipped Multi-player modes the entire last generation (a stepping stone into GaaS).

He was after his Fortnite, Apex, etc… and I feel they could have found that by building a singular new studio dedicated to helping developers like Naughty Dog bring Faction 2.0 to life. At most they should have had:

Factions 2.0 GaaS (PlayStation’s Open World Survival)
Destiny 3 (Bungie needs to revamp Destiny)
Horizon GaaS (PlayStation’s Monster Hunter)
A new AAA IP

That’s it. I mean technically Gran Turismo is a GaaS so that could count, and an Open World InFamous meets DC Universe Online could work with custom hero / villain classes.

raWfodog2d ago (Edited 2d ago )

"I don’t think the GaaS overall was a bad idea they’ve seen the success of others, however, forcing all your studios to focus on it was absolutely insane."

What's more interesting is that SIE was not actually 'forcing' their studios to make GaaS games. I have to find the article again but it was explained that these studios knew about Jim's plans for GaaS games and typically pitched those types of games to SIE because they would have a better chance of getting greenlit for production. They were chasing dollars instead of their ideal games.

Edit: I found the article. Take it for what it is, lol

https://wccftech.com/playst...

ABizzel11d 8h ago (Edited 1d 8h ago )

@ra

I don’t think they were forcing all of their studios, however, that initiative didn’t just come out of no where. Jim Ryan’s entire purpose was to make PlayStation more profitable than ever, and a collection of successful GaaS across platforms would have definitely done that. Based on his talk tracks and interviews he is a numbers guy, and he and Herman Hulst ran with this GaaS solution to all the PlayStation teams.

And when your CEO says this is what we’re getting behind and what the company and shareholders want going forward, everyone falls in line and pushes towards it.

Naughty Dog probably wanted Faction 2 with or without influence.

Sony Bend wanted Days Gone 2 and it was shot down, and now more than ever it makes way more sense, since the game, while initial impressions were slightly above average (which at the time wasn’t good enough being compared to God of War, Ghost, TLoUs, etc…), has found a cult following and has ended up selling extremely well across both PS4 and PS5. But instead they were dropped into this GaaS IP that failed and now they’ve wasted years of development when Days Gone 2 could have already been released or releasing.

3d ago
Obscure_Observer3d ago

Sony literally sent Playstation studios into a death trap!

They forced studios into this GaaS bs just cancel their games midway in development and fire thousand of people in the end!

WTF is happening over there? Why those CEOs still got to keep their jobs after billions and billions dollars invested in new studios and games just to so many developers fired and projects canceled in the end?

This is the worst generation of Playstation! Period!

CrimsonWing692d ago

Jim Ryan got fir—err I mean, retired.

anast2d ago

Jimmy followed Phil's advice.

2d ago
raWfodog2d ago (Edited 2d ago )

They didn't actually 'force' their studios, per se, but the initiative was certainly there.

https://wccftech.com/playst...

-Foxtrot2d ago

They didn't have a choice lets be honest, a new boss comes in and lays out all these plans....what are any of them going to do? Pitch a single player game with none of the things that guy is asking for? You're just asking to be given less funding, less notice, less resources and the like. or maybe you're scared incase the guy decides to get rid of you for someone who will actually give him things that he wants.

They didn't get brutally forced but they had no choice but to go with the flow or Jim would find someone who would.

raWfodog1d 22h ago (Edited 1d 22h ago )

@Foxtrot
No, they definitely had a choice but many chose the path of least resistance.

We have plenty of single-player, non-LS games that began development during the LS initiative. Those projects obviously got greenlit for production. These studios just needed to have good ideas for single player games, but most just chose to come up with half-assed LS pitches.

slate913d ago

Can't believe Sony has been shooting themselves in the foot this gen. Abandoning what made them great to chase industry trends

Skyfly472d ago (Edited 2d ago )

Alanah explains the reasons why in this video which goes into more detail: https://www.youtube.com/wat... But its basically down to appeasing their shareholders

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