Skip to main content

Sony confirms the death of the PSP Go, NGP now the focus

At least Sony tried. If the PSP Go hadn’t been released as the line in a line of continually updating SKUs for the company’s PlayStation Portable gaming device, it could’ve been something cool and different. It was those things, but in stripping away basic PSP features like the UMD disc drive, this smaller, sleeker, more expensive device actually ended up offering less. Repeated attempts have been made to sell gamers on the PSP Go since its late 2009 launch, but Sony has finally given up and admitted defeat on this one. It was the right idea released at the wrong time.

Reports started to circulate yesterday from various sources that the PSP Go had been discontinued. Sony kept quiet about it at first, but eventually issued a statement to Japanese website AV Watch confirming the news (via Gamasutra). Production has ceased on the device and new stock will no longer be shipping out. The PSP Go is gone.

Sony cites the the need to shift focus to the coming NGP handheld as the reason for the move. Low sales numbers were also probably an (understandably unmentioned) issue as well; the biggest problem with the NGP by far was its lack of a UMD drive.

Three PSP SKUs were released prior to the Go, and all of them ran UMD-based games. The Go couldn’t run them and no option was given for transferring UMD content to a memory card, meaning the entire established PSP community would have to either re-purchase their old games as digital downloads or keep an older model handy as a secondary. Which, when you get right down to it, is patently ridiculous.

Tellingly, Sony also confirmed in its statement will continue to manufacture and ship the PSP-3000 (the latest pre-Go version of the device) since it continues to sell. The PSP Go will also continue to be supported with firmware updates and repair services.

Adam Rosenberg
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Previously, Adam worked in the games press as a freelance writer and critic for a range of outlets, including Digital Trends…
End of its Vita: Sony won’t make another PlayStation handheld
graduation gifts Sony PS Vita

Sony's PlayStation home consoles have been absolute smash-hits over their 25-year history, with the PlayStation 4 already selling more than 100 million units and the brand winning a Guinness World Record for its achievements. That same reception was not found with its handheld system the PlayStation Vita, however, and it looks like the little portable powerhouse will never be getting a successor.

Speaking to Game Informer as part of a cover story on the brand's 25th anniversary, Sony Interactive Entertainment president and CEO Jim Ryan was by no means vague about Sony's potential handheld console plans: There are none.

Read more
Ubisoft confirms Assassin’s Creed remakes are in the works
Basim perched on a ledge overlooking Baghdad

In a company interview with CEO Yves Guillemot posted on the Ubisoft website Thursday, the executive reveals that there are remakes of Assassin's Creed games in the works, although he doesn't specify which ones.

"Players can be excited about some remakes, which will allow us to revisit some of the games we've created in the past and modernize them," he says, implying that it could pertain to games made before Odyssey. "There are worlds in some of our older Assassin's Creed games that are still extremely rich."

Read more
Surfaced patent shows what an Xbox streaming console would’ve looked like
An Xbox Series X sits next to both Series S models.

There have been a few Xbox devices that have never come to fruition, one of which was Keystone, a prototype for an affordable game streaming device you could hook up to your TV or monitor. Thanks to a surfaced patent, we've gotten an even closer look at what it would've potentially looked like.

The patent, first spotted by Windows Central, gives us a more complete view of the device. We've previously seen the Keystone in the flesh. Microsoft Gaming head Phil Spencer is known for hiding teases and interesting collectibles on the shelf in his office. In a 2022 X (formerly Twitter) post congratulating Bethesda on Fallout's 25th anniversary, you can see a small white device on the top shelf that's actually a Keystone prototype. Xbox told Digital Trends that it was a version of the device made before it decided to "refocus our efforts on a new approach.”

Read more