Sony has reportedly temporarily halted all production of the PlayStation VR2. The company's purported decision to hit pause on PS VR2 manufacturing is said to be a result of the headset's lackluster sales, which caused an inventory buildup.
Sony's latest virtual reality headset turned one on February 22. The PS VR2 has reportedly been struggling to make its mark on the market over the past year; despite being well-received by reviewers, the device debuted with a modest launch title lineup and a steep $549.99 price tag that made it more expensive than the PS5 that it requires to work. A year later, only a fraction of the PS5's 54 million owners are believed to have bought the console's VR accessory. Sony has yet to share anything in the way of concrete sales figures, suggesting that the PS VR2 is performing worse than its predecessor, which was confirmed to have hit a million sales seven months after its late 2016 release.
The headset's commercial momentum, or lack thereof, is now said to have prompted Sony to pause all PS VR2 production. That's according to a new report from Bloomberg's Takashi Mochizuki, which states the Japanese gaming giant has decided on this course of action after finding itself with a sizable PS VR2 inventory that it has yet to clear, citing people close to the company. According to IDC's estimates, Sony has shipped over 2 million PS VR2 units to retailers since debuting its latest virtual reality headset. How many of those are now in consumers' hands is unclear.
Sony's recent confirmation that it's looking into the possibility of making the PS VR2 PC-compatible appears to track with the claim that the headset hasn't been doing too well, sales-wise. Allowing it to play PC games, something its predecessor was never able to do officially, would ostensibly expand its target audience pool. Another indicator that the company is rethinking its VR push emerged back in February, when Sony decided to close down its PlayStation London Studio, which has
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