Sony may be preparing a major shift in its PC release strategy. According to a new report from Jason Schreier of Bloomberg, the company has scrapped internal plans to bring several first-party PlayStation single-player games to PC. The titles reportedly affected include Ghost of Yotei, Saros, and Marvel’s Wolverine.
Schreier states that Sony will scale back PC releases for its story-driven exclusives. However, multiplayer and live-service titles are still expected to launch on PC alongside their PlayStation versions. In addition, third-party projects published by Sony, such as Death Stranding 2: On the Beach and Kena: Scars of Kosmora, are reportedly not affected and should still arrive on PC.

If accurate, this would mark a notable change from Sony’s recent strategy. Over the past few years, the company has steadily expanded its presence on PC, bringing major titles to Steam and the Epic Games Store months or years after their console debut. One of the most successful examples was Ghost of Tsushima, which performed strongly on PC and became one of Sony’s biggest single-player launches on the platform.
Its successor, Ghost of Yotei, launched on PS5 in October 2025. Based on Sony’s previous release pattern, a PC version would likely have been expected in late 2026. If no announcement is made within that window, it could support the claims in Schreier’s report.

The case of Marvel’s Wolverine adds another layer to the discussion. A playable PC development build leaked online in 2023, confirming that the game was running on PC internally. Although unfinished, it demonstrated that a PC version was technically viable. Under Sony’s prior approach, a delayed PC launch would have seemed probable.
Financial data also complicates the picture. As of early 2026, Sony has reportedly generated more than $2.37 billion in revenue from first-party PlayStation titles released on PC and other platforms. That figure indicates sustained interest from the PC audience.

There is also speculation about a broader platform strategy. Rumors suggest Microsoft’s next Xbox could adopt a Windows-based system closer to a traditional gaming PC. If true, Sony may be reassessing how widely it distributes its first-party titles outside the PlayStation ecosystem. However, this remains unconfirmed.
At the time of writing, Sony has not issued an official statement regarding the reported cancellations. Until further clarification is provided, the report should be viewed as unconfirmed but credible given Schreier’s track record.
