Highlights
- Sony may reduce PC ports of single-player PlayStation games.
- The PC strategy now centers on live-service titles, not delayed narrative releases.
- Marvel’s Wolverine may remain console-focused, with no day-one cross-platform commitment.
Sony may move away from bringing its major single-player PlayStation titles to PC, according to Bloomberg journalist, Jason Schreier. The comments came during Episode 294 of the Triple Click podcast, published on Feb 26, 2026. Schreier stated Sony’s current PC strategy appears focused primarily on live-service titles rather than traditional console exclusives.
“I think the sense I’m getting is that they’re backing away from putting their exclusive console stuff like traditional single-player stuff on PC,” Schreier said during the episode. He added that future narrative-driven releases may not reach PC at all.
Sony’s PC Strategy Focuses on Live-Service Titles Over Delayed Ports
Sony has previously released several PlayStation 5 single-player hits on PC after extended delays.
However, Schreier questioned the commercial impact of those ports, stating, “I’m not sure how super successful those PC releases were.” He suggested that interest in games that arrive more than a year after launch may diminish over time.
Discussing the upcoming Marvel’s Wolverine scheduled for Sept 15, 2026, Schreier mentioned he “wouldn’t be surprised if it never came to PC.” He also added that even if it does, players should expect to need a PlayStation to play it “for the indefinite future.”
After the podcast, Schreier wrote on ResetEra that it was “not speculation” and indicated more reporting is forthcoming.
Unlike Microsoft, Sony has never committed to day-one cross-platform launches. If this direction holds, PlayStation’s single-player exclusives may remain console-focused, reinforcing a hardware-driven strategy.

