Sony Interactive Entertainment's (SIE) latest filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has omitted a line previously included in its annual report regarding the company's commitment to releasing first-party titles on multiple platforms, including PC. This absence follows recent reports suggesting a significant shift in SIE's strategy for bringing its games to PC.

According to reporting by Bloomberg, SIE Studio Business Group CEO Hermen Hulst stated in an internal meeting that the company will no longer release its single-player games on PC. This statement appears to align with earlier March reports indicating that planned PC versions of internally developed titles, such as Ghost of Yōtei and Saros, have been canceled. Ghost of Yōtei is the sequel to 2020's Ghost of Tsushima, which itself later received a PC port.

While first-party single-player titles may become PlayStation-exclusive, Sony's plans for online-focused games and titles developed by external studios remain unchanged. Games like Marathon and Marvel Tokon, developed internally, are still expected to launch on PC. Furthermore, Sony-published titles from third-party developers, including Death Stranding 2 and Kena: Scars of Kosmora, are reportedly still slated for PC releases this year.

Sony has historically released major PlayStation exclusives to PC, starting with Horizon Zero Dawn in 2020. Subsequent PC ports have included titles like God of War Ragnarök, The Last of Us, Ghost of Tsushima, and the Marvel's Spider-Man series. A spokesperson for Sony declined to comment on the reported strategy shift, and sources caution that plans within the dynamic video game industry are subject to change. Source: Anime News Network(https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2026-06-22/sony-annual-ussec-report-makes-no-mention-of-planned-pc-releases/.237509)