
The initial launch price of the PS5 Pro at $699 in November 2024 already seemed steep to many. Yet, by April 2026, the situation worsened unexpectedly as the console’s cost surged to $900 in the U.S.
This significant price hike is attributed to a global shortage of components, largely driven by corporations aggressively constructing data centers for artificial intelligence. Rather than absorbing these increased expenses, Sony opted to transfer the full burden directly onto consumers.
According to Jade King of TheGamer, video gaming is no longer an “affordable luxury.” Modern gamers frequently face a stark choice: purchasing a new console or covering their monthly rent.
The poignant statement, “I’m never going to buy a house anyway, so at least I’ll have this $900 box,” has become a grim reality for many in the gaming community.

Beyond the exorbitant cost, a critical issue is the notable scarcity of new games. While at a comparable stage in the PS4’s life, players enjoyed a rich selection of titles like God of War, Spider-Man, and Horizon, by mid-2026, the count of truly exclusive PlayStation titles is strikingly low.
Sony appears to have transformed into a corporation that shuts down promising studios, like Bluepoint Games, scraps ambitious projects, and inflates hardware prices, largely for devices that primarily serve to run older titles with only minor graphical enhancements.
For decades, the established principle was that electronics would decrease in price over time. This long-standing rule has now been shattered; the PS5 not only fails to become more affordable but is instead experiencing a significant price increase.

