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Leak says PlayStation 6 production starts 2027, but is it too soon for you?

Early builds could help avoid PS5-era shortages if launch lands late 2027.

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A person holding a PlayStation 5 controller.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

What’s happened? A fresh leak says Sony will start building the PlayStation 6 in early 2027, then target a late-year launch.

  • Moore’s Law is Dead, a hardware leaker with a track record on PlayStation leaks, says he has seen documents pointing to manufacturing in the first half of 2027, with planning that began about two years ago.
  • An earlier ramp could help Sony avoid the PS5’s post-2020 shortages that stretched through 2022.

This is important because: The 2027 window matches Sony’s usual rhythm. That gives players, developers, and retailers a more reliable clock to schedule against instead of waiting for a vague 2028.

  • PS4 arrived in 2013 and the PS5 in 2020. This is a seven-year handoff that a 2027 release of the PS6 could repeat.
  • If that cadence stays the same, late-cycle PS5 and PS5 Pro planning tightens, from game timing to accessory buys, so upgrades are easier to time.
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Why should I care? A 2027 PS6 reframes the PS5 Pro. The Pro launched in 2024 with the same library as PS5, so it still matters, but its spotlight likely centers on 2025 and 2026 before the next gen shows up.

  • PS5 Pro becomes the bridge, not the destination.
  • The best PS5 Pro games optimized for the console will likely be migrated to the PS6 if Sony says yes to backwards compatibility.
  • Studios can fine-tune on PS5 Pro and carry lessons forward, using higher targets and performance modes as a staging ground for PS6 builds.

Okay, so what’s next? For PS6 to feel like a clear generational jump, the gains need to be obvious on screen and in feel. Think steadier high-res performance, better lighting, and faster worlds in a cooler, quieter console. We want to see:

  • Ray tracing at 60 frames, closer to high-end PCs.
  • 4K60 as the baseline, regular 120 Hz modes, and smarter upscalers.
  • Bigger lifts under the hood, stronger CPU cores, wider memory bandwidth with more RAM.

Chatter around the PS6 is welcome, but generational jumps are harder to justify when players value gameplay and storytelling over marginal graphics gains. The PS6 could change that with a clearly bigger hardware leap. There’s no official news from Sony yet, but expect more rumors as 2027 draws near.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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