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Sony shipped 4.5 million PS5 consoles in 2020 -- not enough to satisfy consumers

Consumers have scrambled to snatch up the hard-to-get console since its Nov. 12 launch.

Sean Keane Former Senior Writer
Sean knows far too much about Marvel, DC and Star Wars, and poured this knowledge into recaps and explainers on CNET. He also worked on breaking news, with a passion for tech, video game and culture.
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Sean Keane
2 min read
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The PS5, which launched in mid-November, is still hard to come by.

Dan Ackerman/CNET

You might have struggled to get a PS5 since its mid-November launch, though Sony did ship 4.5 million units of its next-gen console in 2020. That figure comes from the company's latest earnings report and is similar to figures for the PS4 immediately after its 2013 launch, according to analyst Daniel Ahmad.

The major difference between the two consoles' launches is that the PS5 launched during the coronavirus pandemic and has been tougher to come by. It's likely that the PS5 will be even more popular than its predecessor in the long term, even though the PS4 is the second best-selling console of any brand of all time. (The PS2 is still No. 1.)

Sony is currently in its fourth fiscal quarter, which lasts through March. The company aims to sell more than 14.8 million PS5s in its next fiscal year, chief financial officer Hiroki Totoki said at a news conference, according to Nikkei.

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Spider-Man: Miles Morales, a PS5 launch title, was one of the biggest hits in terms of software, selling 4.1 million copies by the end of December. PlayStation Plus subscriptions, which are required for most online games, hit 47.4 million by the end of December, up from the 45.9 million at the end of September.

This adds up to the PlayStation division's best quarter ever, with revenue up 40% year-over-year to 883.2 billion yen ($8.4 billion). That's likely a result of the PS5, even though it was only on sale for the final seven weeks of the quarter. Sony noted that it is selling the PS5 for less than it costs to make.

To no one's surprise, Sony sold far fewer PS4 consoles in the final quarter of 2020 than it did in the same period in the previous year -- 1.4 million units versus 6 million in 2019. 

Watch this: PS5 vs. Xbox Series X: the ultimate comparison