Sony has quietly updated parts of its PlayStation Studios website, and the changes line up with recent reports that the company is rethinking its PC strategy for first-party games, especially big single-player titles that previously saw strong demand outside consoles.
These updates appeared on the U.S. version of the site, while some regional pages still show older descriptions, which suggests a staggered rollout rather than a fully synchronized update across all markets.
According to Bloomberg, Sony has pulled back from plans to bring major single-player PlayStation games to PC, including titles such as Ghost of Yōtei and Housemarque’s SAROS, which were expected to follow the company’s earlier push to expand beyond consoles.
Push Square later connected the website edits to that same report, which explains why these quiet changes have gained attention in recent days.
Key changes on PlayStation Studios site
The updated site removes most mentions of PC from several studio descriptions, while keeping Nixxes Software as the only studio that still clearly focuses on PC ports, which shows Sony has not fully stepped away from the platform but has narrowed its focus. Valkyrie Entertainment and XDev both removed references to working across console and PC, and now highlight PlayStation exclusivity more directly.
Sony also refreshed its main banner, adding newer titles like Ghost of Yōtei and Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet, while removing Demon’s Souls Remake, which signals a shift in how the company presents its current lineup. The company also removed Bluepoint Games and Dark Outlaw Games following their closures, and introduced teamLFG, a new studio made up of former Bungie developers.
These changes do not confirm that Sony is ending PC releases, but they show a clear shift in direction, and the company now appears to prioritize PlayStation as the primary platform for its biggest games.