Sony has gone full 180 with its plans to share PlayStation's single-player games on the PC gaming platform as the company is now reportedly changing its decision to release said titles to computers.
Sony Axes PC Releases of Single-Player Games
Bloomberg's Jason Schreier revealed in his latest report that Sony has decided to keep the single-player games it already released and those coming in the future far away from PCs.
The report shared that people familiar with Sony's plans recently claimed that the company's decision to cancel all PC releases centers on the business side of things. According to the cited sources, Sony wants to avoid hurting the PlayStation 5 console sales in the market, as well as the upcoming unannounced successor.
It was also revealed that Sony also fears that PlayStation's single-player games may also end up on the competition's console, Xbox, as Microsoft is speculated to be working on a way for the platform to play PC games directly.
PlayStation Exclusives to Remain As Is
According to Schreier's report, the exclusivity of said PlayStation games only applies to single-player titles as multiplayer and online titles will still make their way to the PC platform. This centers on the upcoming release of Bungie's "Marathon" that is making its way to both the PlayStation 5 and PC.
Single-player games that were PS5 exclusives but were developed by studios that Sony does not own may still release on PCs should their developers choose to, with an example being "Death Stranding 2: On the Beach."
That said, last year's "Ghost of Yotei" by SIE's Sucker Punch Production, as well as the upcoming game, "Saros," will no longer have their PC releases.
