Sony has removed language committing to PlayStation PC ports from its 2026 annual report filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The deletion is the company’s clearest public signal yet that it has stepped back from releasing single-player titles on PC. For players who had come to rely on Sony’s porting schedule to access PlayStation exclusives, the change means that pipeline has closed.
Last year’s SEC filing contained a direct line: “Sony plans to continue its efforts to deploy its first-party titles to multiple platforms such as PC.” That sentence does not appear in the 2026 version.
The PlayStation PC ports rollback
Sony began porting PlayStation exclusives to PC around 2020, starting with titles like Horizon Zero Dawn and Death Stranding several years after their original PS4 launches. The approach let Sony reach a new audience on PC while its console titles continued to sell. The window between console and PC releases was measured in years at first, with Sony treating ports as a way to extend the commercial life of its biggest titles.
That gap shrank over time. By 2023 and 2024, PlayStation exclusives were reaching PC within one to two years of their PS5 debuts, and the PlayStation PC ports schedule had become consistent enough that players began to assume most major single-player titles would eventually arrive on Steam. Sony never formally committed to a specific release window, but the pattern carried expectations of its own.
A Bloomberg report from earlier this year claimed Sony had decided to end that model for upcoming single-player games. Sony did not respond publicly at the time. The removal of the PlayStation PC ports language from the SEC filing is the closest the company has come to confirming the shift. Because annual SEC reports are legal documents, the deletion carries more weight than a typical press release would.
Which PlayStation games won’t come to PC
PlayStation Studios CEO Hermen Hulst reportedly told staff in May that upcoming single-player titles would not receive PC versions, according to Bloomberg. The games named specifically are Ghost of Yotei, Saros, and Marvel’s Wolverine. Players had expected all three to follow the same path as earlier PlayStation exclusives.
The policy shift appears limited to single-player titles. Sony’s multiplayer releases have generally launched on both PC and PS5 simultaneously in recent years, and nothing in the filing or the Bloomberg report suggests that is changing.
Other changes in the 2026 Sony annual report
The 2026 filing includes two other notable edits. Sony added a new section describing plans to use AI to improve the PlayStation experience. The company also removed the word “profitable” from a statement about its immediate business goals, citing the ongoing impact of semiconductor shortages and higher hardware prices as factors affecting its near-term targets. Sony has not publicly commented on either change.