According to Jason Schreier, Sony's attempts to conquer the PC market have not brought the company the desired financial success.
Bloomberg journalist Jason Schreier has stated that Sony Interactive Entertainment may revise its strategy for releasing its games on PC. According to him, in the future, the company may focus on releasing exclusively service projects on personal computers, while traditional single-player exclusives will remain tied to PlayStation consoles.
In recent years, Sony has actively ported its flagship series to PC — from The Last of Us and Marvel's Spider-Man to Horizon and God of War. However, as Schreier noted in the Triple Click podcast, the company's strategy may change.
According to him, Sony intends to continue releasing games-as-a-service on PC, but is "moving away" from the practice of porting large single-player exclusives. As an example, the journalist cited the upcoming action game Marvel's Wolverine, which will be released exclusively on PlayStation 5 on September 15, 2026 — a PC version has not even been announced yet.
Schreier suggested that the game may not reach personal computers at all. Even if this happens, the release, in his opinion, will be delayed, and the project itself will remain associated exclusively with the PlayStation ecosystem for a long time.
A potential abandonment of active PC expansion would be a noticeable turnaround for Sony. However, Schreier doubts that this will cause serious damage to the company. According to his assessment, the release of exclusives on PC initially did not bring such significant results that abandoning this practice would be a painful blow.