In what is undoubtedly a shock move by Sony, PlayStation has announced it is ending physical game production in 2028, and that all new games sold in physical retailers will come with a code that can then be used to activate the copy on an account.
Sony Interactive Entertainment explained that digital media significantly outpaces physical discs, and that these changes don't affect any games that have already been released, or are planned to be released on disc format before the January 2028 cutoff. Now that we know when PlayStation won't be producing game discs, it begs the question as to when Xbox will also make the leap into the entirely digital realm.
Windows Central editor and known industry insider, specifically with the inner workings of Microsoft and Xbox, Jez Corden, responded to the announcement from PlayStation in an X post, writing, "Don't expect Xbox Helix to have a disc drive either btw." It would make sense for Helix to also follow suit, especially with Game Pass being such a focus for the Xbox brand, and how Xbox is looking to reduce expenditure as much as possible following waves of layoffs and studio closures.
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If Xbox Helix lacks a disc drive as suggested, how might that affect backward compatibility with physical Xbox games I already own?
With Sony ending physical disc production in 2028, will retailers still sell older PlayStation discs after that date or only digital-code boxed copies?
How could removing disc drives influence the retail price or included storage capacity of next-gen consoles like PlayStation 6 and Xbox Helix?
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Additionally, if Sony isn't putting any new games on discs in 2028 and beyond, that means the PlayStation 6 standard edition won't have a disc drive at all, and if the rumors are true for Xbox Helix, that console also won't have a disc drive. By removing the disc drive, both Sony and Microsoft will be able to reduce the total cost of materials for each console, which is something both companies are desperately looking to do amid rising component costs (RAM/Storage) caused by the AI boom.




