
PS Plus and Game Pass price hikes loom as Sony looks to 'add more value'
PS Plus will be subject to more price hikes in the future, as Xbox players fear a possible increase to Game Pass as well.
Almost two years after Sony increased the price of certain PS Plus subscriptions, the company has thrown out the possibility of adjusting its 'pricing strategy' once again.
During a business conference, Sony was asked by investors about the reason behind the 2023 price increase, along with what factors may lead to another hike in the future.
In response, Sony Interactive Entertainment president and CEO Hideaki Nishino explained how the percentage of PlayStation Plus subscribers on the higher tiers had grown over the past few years.
According to a chart which accompanied the Q&A, 17% of PS Plus subscribers were on the Premium tier and 13% were on the Extra tier in the 2022 fiscal year, which has increased to 22% and 16%, respectively, by the 2024 fiscal year.
'PlayStation Plus is highly valued by our players and continues to drive engagement,' Nishino said. 'We're already seen a trend toward the option of higher tiers within our service, as evidenced by the subscriber mix we achieved in fiscal year 2024, where approximately 38% of players are now subscribed to PlayStation Plus Premium or Extra tiers.
'This is even after the global price increases we implemented in fiscal year 2023, and more recently, the local price increases in selected countries, to improve our pricing strategy across certain market clusters, and also to account for [foreign exchange] movements.'
Sign up to the GameCentral newsletter for a unique take on the week in gaming, alongside the latest reviews and more. Delivered to your inbox every Saturday morning.
When discussing the factors which go into these price hikes, Nishino said the company will continue to change prices 'in a dynamic way' moving forward.
He added: 'These price increases were partly a result of increasing value we bring to the players, through the quality and diversity of content we continue to add, as well as investment in the features to improve the service further, such as player personalisation and enhanced content discovery.
'The PlayStation Plus service offers great value for our players, and we will continue to add more value and adjust our pricing strategy in a dynamic way to maximise profitability.'
While a price increase was inevitable at some point, it's certainly not a promising sign for anyone who thought PS Plus prices might be frozen for some time – even if Nishino doesn't give an explicit indication of when a price adjustment could happen.
As prices of subscription services continue to rise across all of entertainment, players have also found evidence that Microsoft might be considering a price bump for Xbox Game Pass. More Trending
Bluesky user redphx, an account dedicated to highlighting backend changes on Xbox Cloud Gaming, has claimed a new notification type called 'SubscriptionPriceIncrease' has been added to the xCloud website.
While this in itself doesn't necessarily mean a price increase is imminent, Microsoft did the raise the price of Xbox Game Pass in July last year, and in June the year before that, so it's possible another is drifting down the pipeline for summer 2025.
As for what upcoming games could justify the increase, The Outer Worlds 2 is set to arrive on October 29 priced at £69.99. Other titles on the horizon include Double Fine's Keeper, Ninja Gaiden 4, and this year's new Call Of Duty.
Email gamecentral@metro.co.uk, leave a comment below, follow us on Twitter.
To submit Inbox letters and Reader's Features more easily, without the need to send an email, just use our Submit Stuff page here.
For more stories like this, check our Gaming page.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Metro
16 hours ago
- Metro
As a former Xbox 360 owner I don't understand Xbox today - Reader's Feature
A reader looks back on the Xbox 360 era and is frustrated at how things have evolved since then, with ROG Xbox Ally and the move towards multiformat releases. I though the Xbox Games Showcase on Sunday was pretty good. Like Sony's State of Play, it was mostly third party games but there was some interesting stuff there and I think overall the vibe was better than from Sony. I liked the look of High On Life 2, There Are No Ghosts At The Grand, and Cronos: The New Dawn the best but there was a lot of potentially cool games – I'd include Keeper, because it looked interestingly weird, but I don't feel Double Fine are ever very good at gameplay. The biggest news out of the event was the new portable with the terrible name: Asus ROG Xbox Ally. I bet you can just imagine some parent asking that for that at shop at Christmas, to buy their kid? Not that that would ever happen because the thing's going to be stupidly expensive. It seemed like a distraction, a small experiment at best, and I didn't really pay much attention to it, especially as I already have a Steam Deck. But then today I read that Microsoft has cancelled its plans for their next gen portable and that actually this ridiculously named non-Xbox device may end up being the future of gaming for Microsoft. I've always preferred Xbox as my console as choice, probably because I was always a PC gamer before that. Although now I look back at things I have to admit that I only got the Xbox One out of brand loyalty and I wouldn't have if I'd been thinking about it more clearly. By that point I was in too deep and so I bought the Xbox Series X/S out of muscle memory more than anything, wasn't I proven to be a chump? What frustrates me most about Xbox at the moment is how indecisive it seems. I almost didn't watch the Xbox Games Showcase because I knew I'd have to see Phil Spencer, or one of his goons, grinning into the camera, as if nothing is wrong. And, of course, that's exactly what he did, 'hinting' about the return of Halo, as if everyone was going to be pumping the air to hear about that. Sign up to the GameCentral newsletter for a unique take on the week in gaming, alongside the latest reviews and more. Delivered to your inbox every Saturday morning. News flash, Phil: no one cares. You've run that series into the ground, like all the other Xbox exclusives, to the point where they just feel old fashioned and tired. Old school fans don't care and newer ones definitely don't. It may sell okay at first on PlayStation 5, but only out of curiosity and as a kind of celebration that Sony has finally defeated Microsoft. To all extents and purposes, Xbox is now third party. The only thing that makes them not is that they still make their own console hardware but how long is that going to last? The ROG Ally is made by Asus and if Microsoft don't make a handheld are they really going to put out a home console instead? That's going to cost a lot of money in R&D and marketing and everything else, and I don't know who could argue that it's got a chance of selling more than the Xbox Series X/S. Phil Spencer has been talking about making a handheld for years and yet suddenly it's not going to happen? Is there anything that is set in stone? I even heard people talking about them going back to having exclusives with the next generation, if it seemed like things were working out. I loved my Xbox 360, it's still my favourite console of all time – the perfect balance between modern and retro games – but its golden era is a long time ago now, well over a decade. Xbox at the time was the new kid on the block, full of new ideas and daring to what Sony wouldn't or couldn't. When was the last time Xbox did anything like that? Game Pass probably, and that hasn't worked out at all well. More Trending Nothing has, ever since that disastrous Xbox One reveal, and I just don't understand how a company with basically infinite resources, and which already owns half the games industry, can be such a hopeless mess. I'm just sticking with PC from now and in the future, I'm going to pretend the Xbox 360 was my one and only console. By reader Cramersauce The reader's features do not necessarily represent the views of GameCentral or Metro. You can submit your own 500 to 600-word reader feature at any time, which if used will be published in the next appropriate weekend slot. Just contact us at gamecentral@ or use our Submit Stuff page and you won't need to send an email. MORE: The 5 worst mistakes of the Nintendo Switch 2 launch (and why it doesn't matter) - Reader's Feature MORE: Nintendo Switch 2: does it deserve the hate? - Reader's Feature MORE: I've had the Nintendo Switch 2 for one day and I'm not impressed – Reader's Feature


Metro
a day ago
- Metro
The 5 worst mistakes of the Nintendo Switch 2 launch (and why it doesn't matter)
A reader breaks down the Switch 2 launch line-up and lists the mistakes he feels Nintendo has made, from the marketing to the prices. I'm not sure if anyone seriously thought the Nintendo Switch 2 would be a failure but to the absolute shock of no one sensible it hasn't been. It's the fastest-selling console ever, according to what I've read, and I'm sure that it will go on to have a very long life and plenty of great games. I have one and a copy of Mario Kart World, and I've enjoyed it a lot, but despite what I imagined at the start of the year – and I think a lot of people were like this – Nintendo's roll out of the console hasn't been as slick as I expected. I feel they have made a number of strange mistakes and just generally were too secretive and unclear about things for no reason that can have helped them. Since the console is selling anyway maybe they'll think they made the right decisions. I guess I should just assume they know better, because what do I know, but here's what I think they got wrong. I'm not going to come out and say Mario Kart World isn't worth £75, but then I don't really know because I only paid £35 for it, as part of the hardware bundle. And even if I had bought it separately, I would've bought it digitally, which is considerably cheaper. So why did Nintendo let the games being expensive become the story? Mario Kart is the only one that's that much and yet people are still running around saying it's £80. The launch report on the BBC news was all about how expensive it was, and I feel Nintendo just let all the bad press happen. If digital downloads are the majority now, why wasn't that figure the one that was being promoted, and the physical one was just an optional extra? Sign up to the GameCentral newsletter for a unique take on the week in gaming, alongside the latest reviews and more. Delivered to your inbox every Saturday morning. This is a more minor thing but I feel the hype of new reviews is all part of the fun of a new console launch, but we didn't get anything on launch day, just more previews and then a slow trickle over the coming days, that were obviously rushed or just ignored the smaller games entirely. Again, I don't feel that was a good look for Nintendo and because Mario Kart's reviews weren't completely ecstatic there's always going to be the question of whether they were purposefully trying to delay them until the last minute, which is not something I previously would've thought Nintendo would do. As a continuation of this, I don't think anyone would disagree that the way Mario Kart World uses its open world is weird, especially when it comes to the mostly empty Free Roam. It doesn't spoil the game, but it does remove the one thing that would've made the game a 10/10 all-timer and you really wouldn't have thought Nintendo would miss a trick like that. Also, it's kind of the fault of the marketing for hyping it up. If they'd barely mention the open world people wouldn't have been expecting anything, so I do think the marketing for the Switch 2 as a whole has had problem. It's only slowly come into focus just how bad the launch line-up is for the Switch 2. Not in terms of quality but the almost complete lack of exclusives. Just one proper one for Nintendo, only one kind-of full price one from third parties and everything else is just ports of sometimes multiple years old games. It feels rushed, for what must be the least rushed console ever, in terms of the time Nintendo had to plan for it and launching it in the middle of June – for still no reason that I can understand. This is linked to the previous point, but the future is also looking strangely bleak at the moment. I'm sure it's not overall but Nintendo has done very little to make it seem exciting. Hyrule Warriors 3 and Kirby Air Riders must be the two least wanted Nintendo sequels ever, then you've got that cheap looking basketball game, and then a Splatoon spin-off, and The Duskbloods from FromSoftware. And even that's multiplayer, so it's not as exciting as it first seemed. A new Zelda could be half a decade away at this point and we've got absolutely no idea about a new 3D Mario. More Trending By reader Garrant The reader's features do not necessarily represent the views of GameCentral or Metro. You can submit your own 500 to 600-word reader feature at any time, which if used will be published in the next appropriate weekend slot. Just contact us at gamecentral@ or use our Submit Stuff page and you won't need to send an email. MORE: Nintendo Switch 2: does it deserve the hate? - Reader's Feature MORE: I've had the Nintendo Switch 2 for one day and I'm not impressed – Reader's Feature MORE: Why is nobody talking about the PS5 anymore? – Reader's Feature


Metro
2 days ago
- Metro
Nintendo Switch 2: does it deserve the hate? - Reader's Feature
A reader counters five of the most common criticisms against the Nintendo Switch 2, arguing that concerns about its pricing and lack of games are overstated. I received the Switch 2 earlier this week after bagging myself a last minute pre-order. For the most part I'm pretty happy with my purchase. However, I've seen a lot of negativity online, most of it likely as a result of the prices of games such as Mario Kart World. I'd like to give my thoughts on the latest Nintendo console and whether I feel these criticisms are valid. This is somewhat valid criticism but at the same time this of true of most consoles. With each passing generation the improvements get smaller and smaller. As someone who was lucky enough to get a PlayStation 5 on launch day, I feel the difference between Switch 1 and Switch 2 is far greater than the jump from PlayStation 4 to 5. I've not played the game, but Cyberpunk 2077 is a brilliant example. There's not a chance that game would've run on the original Switch. Immediately I feel Mario Kart World seems more advanced visually compared to Mario Kart 8. I think the biggest noticeable difference is possibly Zelda. I haven't played Breath Of The Wild yet but Tears Of The Kingdom looks great and so much sharper. Also, it might be the game where I actually understand why people bang on about frame rates. I never normally can tell the difference unless it drops below 30fps but playing the upgraded Tears Of The Kingdom it just seems so much quicker. Overall, I'm happy with the improvements. Having never owned the OLED version the screen feels immediately much better. It's essentially an upgraded Switch but that's exactly what I expected and wanted from it. Sign up to the GameCentral newsletter for a unique take on the week in gaming, alongside the latest reviews and more. Delivered to your inbox every Saturday morning. Again, yes this is correct. But obviously the Switch 2 is far smaller than both these devices and obviously, being a hybrid device, I imagine the technology doesn't yet exist to create a device that is on par with the most modern hardware and retain portability and affordability. Again, given that Cyberpunk 2077 is a launch game, and includes the DLC only available on modern hardware, it seems that at least for a few years Switch 2 might have third party titles that are comparable to the versions on PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X/S. When you compare Switch ports of The Witcher, Batman: Arkham Knight or Mortal Kombat to the Switch 2 ports so far in Street Fighter 6 and Cyberpunk 2077 it seems like the Switch 2 is far comparable to other consoles than the Switch was to the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One. The real test, I imagine, will be when the next generation starts. This, for me, is possibly the most ridiculous comment that I've seen repeated numerous times. I previously had a Steam Deck and traded it in for the more powerful Legion Go. And don't get me wrong, I love the device. However, it isn't for everyone. Firstly, it seems from seeing a few comparison videos that the Switch 2 seems to be outperforming the Steam Deck and performance seems comparable to more advanced handheld PCs, such as the ROG Ally and Legion Go. Secondly, a handheld PC requires a degree of technical know-how and some people just want to be able to play without having to tweak certain settings first. I imagine some games will also run better for this reason. For example, I subscribed to Ubisoft+ for a month to try Str Wars Outlaws and I could not get it to run well consistently on my Legion Go. I'm interested to see how it'll run if the Switch 2. I don't mind tinkering with settings but sometimes it's nice to just play a game that's already optimised. Also, let's face it, most people buying the Switch 2 just want to play Nintendo games. Again, a somewhat valid complaint. Really the only new games are Mario Kart World and Welcome Tour, with one being a glorified tech demo. However, many launches are the same. The original Switch wasn't as great as people remember. Sure, Zelda: Breath Of The Wild is arguably one of the best games of all time but it also launched alongside the Wii U version. Other exclusives, such as Mario Kart 8 Deluxe, ARMS, Splatoon 2, and Super Mario Odyssey didn't release till later in the year. There's still Metroid Prime 4 later in the year and Donkey Kong Bananza in a few weeks' time. And who knows what other games might be announced if the rumoured Nintendo Direct this month goes ahead. Personally, I'm happy with the output that's planned so far. I only hope it continues. Some of this criticism is in response to pricing. I think the console itself is reasonably priced, especially when you consider both Sony and Microsoft increasing their prices recently. However, I am slightly miffed about the potential for £75 games as standard. I think though, it's hard to quantify how many games will adopt this pricing structure. The upcoming Donkey Kong Bananza seems to be priced a bit cheaper and is less than the standard RRP for other new games on other platforms. I also appreciate that Nintendo offer a discount on digital games. Increasingly, I think we are moving towards all-digital games and wouldn't be surprised if the next generation of PlayStation and Xbox devices don't come with disk drives. So, to at least offer a discount is commendable, although I do feel more should be done to take the sting out a bit. More frequent sales with bigger discounts, money off for multiple purchases, bring back gold points for example. I think the issue of pricing is a wider issue and is only likely to get worse. Game development time and costs seem to be out of hand and personally I'd rather see smaller games to compensate for this. All in all, I'm pleased with my purchase. Is the Switch 2 a worthy successor to the original Switch? Perhaps? But it's too soon to say. It's a significantly bigger and better screen than the original, with updated tech and visuals and that's what I wanted from it. More Trending Could it have launched with more games? Possibly. But for now I think Mario Kart World has renewed my enthusiasm for the series, after not playing the previous iteration for some time. Zelda: Tears Of The Kingdom feels like a fully-fledged remaster and feels like a significant upgrade and I've also played a bit of Street Fighter 6, a game which I wouldn't normally enjoy but hope to play against my daughters with the two Joy-Cons. By reader matc7884 The reader's features do not necessarily represent the views of GameCentral or Metro. You can submit your own 500 to 600-word reader feature at any time, which if used will be published in the next appropriate weekend slot. Just contact us at gamecentral@ or use our Submit Stuff page and you won't need to send an email. MORE: I've had the Nintendo Switch 2 for one day and I'm not impressed – Reader's Feature MORE: Why is nobody talking about the PS5 anymore? – Reader's Feature MORE: The original Switch is still a better option than the Switch 2 - Reader's Feature