The PlayStation 5 is flying off store shelves, but--due to supply chain issues and other factors--the system has not been able to match the sales success of the PlayStation 4 thus far. Another recent revelation was that Sony would not comment on a potential PS5 price increase. Here's what we know.
Sony's latest earnings briefing shows that Sony sold a further 2.4 million PS5 systems in the quarter that ended on June 30, bringing the system's lifetime haul to 21.7 million since launch in November 2020. The 2.4 million PS5s sold was up 4% year-over-year.
The PS4, by comparison, reached 25.4 million units after its first seven quarters on the market. Looking to Xbox, Microsoft no longer announces console sales numbers, but it has said the Xbox Series X|S family of consoles is selling better than any previous Xbox console generation at this point in its lifecycle.
Sony: PS5 lifetime shipments are now at 21.7M, after selling 2.4M in the quarter ending June 2022. Compare that to PS4, which was 25.4M after 7 quarters on market, and it's clear how much supply is impacting current gen. Still, Sony reiterated its 18M fiscal year 2022 target. pic.twitter.com/nHzUjvUgMS
Elsewhere, Sony announced that more than 47.1 million PlayStation games were sold in the last quarter, including 6.4 million worth of first-party games. A mighty 79% of games sold were digital.
Total PlayStation game sales for the quarter dropped by 26%, while PlayStation Plus subscribers fell to 47.3 million, down 2%. Monthly active PSN users reached 102 million, which was down 3%.
Also as part of the earnings briefing, Sony management declined to comment on the possibility of raising the price of the PlayStation 5 due to the ongoing chip shortages and other
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