Home Industry Technology Sony gains most since July after PlayStation gaming price hike The gaming and entertainment giant will now charge as much as $159.99 annually for the premium tier of the popular service by Bloomberg September 3, 2023 Image credit: Getty Images Sony Group rose its most in more than a month after hiking the price of its core gaming PlayStation Plus subscription service by roughly a third, potentially shoring up its bottom line. The gaming and entertainment giant will now charge as much as $159.99 annually for the premium tier of the popular service, required for multiplayer gaming as well as free downloads. That follows main competitor Microsoft, which hiked fees for the similar Xbox Game Pass service over the summer. Sony’s shares gained as much as 3.4 per cent in Tokyo on Friday. Sony and Microsoft are betting that gamers will continue to pay for premium content and services even as they tighten their belts during an economic downturn. Consumers from the US to China have shown a willingness to spend on services and experiences even while cutting back on big-ticket items. Sony’s move could herald a series of regular price hikes, CLSA analyst Amit Garg said. This week’s “steep” increase could add a net YEN100bn ($688m) of sales and YEN55bn of operating profit annually. He warned however that there may be fallout for gamer spending given the weak macroeconomic conditions. The Japanese company last month delivered a financial outlook that missed expectations, citing delays in exiting a global smartphone slump. It also reported weaker-than-expected sales for its flagship PlayStation 5 during the April-June quarter, igniting concern the company will need to spend more on marketing to achieve its goal of selling 25 million units this fiscal year. Also read: Sony acquires high-end headphone maker to boost PlayStation Tags microsoft Sony Technology 0 Comments You might also like OpenAI in talks to raise new funding at $100bn valuation UAE consumers worried about application failure during holiday season: Report Oracle targets training 50,000 Saudis in AI, latest tech Abu Dhabi launches free Hala Wi-Fi across emirate