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Today β€” 20 May 2026Main stream

Sony faces class-action lawsuit over PS5 price hikes tied to tariffs

19 May 2026 at 22:28

Sony Interactive Entertainment is facing a new class-action lawsuit in the US over PlayStation 5 price increases introduced last year during the height of tariff uncertainty. The case argues that Sony raised prices citing import-related costs, but may have continued benefiting from those increases even after the tariffs themselves were later struck down.

The lawsuit, filed in California earlier this month, centers around PS5 pricing changes made in August 2025. At the time, Sony pointed to challenging economic environment, which included tariffs introduced under the Trump administration alongside broader supply chain pressures and rising component costs.

Things became more complicated after the US Supreme Court ruled those tariffs unlawful earlier this year. That decision potentially opened the door for companies to recover some of the tariff money through refunds from US Customs and Border Protection.

According to the plaintiffs, that creates a problem. The lawsuit claims consumers may have effectively paid higher PS5 prices because of tariffs while companies could still end up reclaiming some of those same costs afterward. In simple terms, critics argue companies might have passed the costs onto buyers while also seeking reimbursement later.

The lawsuit specifically accuses Sony of unfairly profiting from the situation, though it is important to note there is currently no proof the company intentionally engaged in wrongdoing. Sony also never said tariffs were the only reason behind the price increases. Like most electronics manufacturers at the time, the company was also dealing with higher logistics costs, component shortages, currency fluctuations, and general inflation across the supply chain.

The case is seeking refunds for consumers who bought PlayStation consoles during the affected pricing period.

Sony is not alone here either. Similar legal complaints have reportedly targeted other major companies, including Nintendo, Amazon, Nike, and Adidas, as frustration grows around how corporations handled tariff-related pricing during that period.

At the center of all this is a broader question that goes beyond gaming: when companies raise prices because of temporary external pressures, should those prices come back down once those pressures disappear?

Sony has not publicly responded to the lawsuit in detail so far. But the case will probably be watched closely, especially by gaming communities already frustrated with rising console and game prices over the past few years.

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The post Sony faces class-action lawsuit over PS5 price hikes tied to tariffs appeared first on Gizmochina.

Yesterday β€” 19 May 2026Main stream

Nintendo Switch 2’s Price Hike Marks the End of Mid-Cycle Price Cuts as β€œThe Old Rules” are Obsolete, Analyst Argues

19 May 2026 at 22:48

Mario, wearing a red cap with an 'M' emblem, clutches his chest while standing in a lush field of giant red mushrooms with white spots.

Earlier this month, it was finally confirmed that Nintendo could hold out no longer. The Nintendo Switch 2 is going up in price, with a $50 increase going into effect globally on September 1, 2026. It's a sign of Nintendo, like XBOX and PlayStation, succumbing to the combined pressures of elements like the memory shortage and tariffs, but according to veteran analyst Joost van Dreunen, this final domino falling is "the canary in the coal mine" that if even Nintendo can't stick to its traditional guns, "none of the old rules" of the video game industry are relevant. If van […]

Read full article at https://wccftech.com/nintendo-switch-2-price-hike-canary-in-coal-mine-video-game-industry-old-rules-no-longer-apply/

PlayStation’s Single-Player Games Will Stay PlayStation Exclusives With No PC Ports, CEO Herman Hulst Reportedly Told Staff Today

18 May 2026 at 23:51

A collage of PlayStation Studios gaming characters and a baseball player, with the 'PlayStation Studios' logo in the center.

Back in March, a report from Bloomberg pointed to PlayStation moving away from bringing its first-party, narrative-driven single-player games like God of War, Ghost of Yotei, Saros, and Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet to PC. Multiplayer games like Marathon and Helldivers 2 will still head to other platforms, but not single-player titles. Now, a new report from Bloomberg adds that today, in a town hall meeting, Herman Hulst, chief executive officer of studio businesses at PlayStation, told staff that single-player narrative games will be PlayStation console exclusive titles going forward. It's the latest nail in the coffin of PlayStation's short-lived PC-PS5-parity-era, […]

Read full article at https://wccftech.com/playstation-first-party-single-player-games-not-coming-to-pc-anymore-herman-hulst/

Before yesterdayMain stream

PlayStation Raises PS Plus Prices for New Subscribers in Select Regions, Current Customers Mostly Unaffected

18 May 2026 at 20:38

The image shows the PlayStation Plus logo with three subscription tiers: 'Essential', 'Extra', and 'Premium'.

Well, it's happened again. PlayStation has announced a price increase for its PS Plus subscription service, but this time it's only impacting new customers, with current subscribers mostly unaffected, unless you live in Turkey or India. In those countries, even current subscribers will see their subscription payments go up. Announced in a short post on the official PlayStation X (formerly Twitter) account, PlayStation confirmed that beginning in just two days on May 20, 2026, new customers will see PS Plus subscriptions start at $10.99 USD/month instead of the previous $9.99/month. Three-month subscriptions will go up to $27.99 USD/three months from […]

Read full article at https://wccftech.com/ps-plus-price-increase-new-customers/

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