Summary
Sales of thePlayStation 5 Prohave started to fall behind the PS4 Pro’s pace, according to one industry analyst. When Sony released its latest console, it quickly gained attention for its impressive specs and equally breathtaking price tag. Now it seems that, despite a solid start, thePlayStation 5 Proisn’t meeting the same standard as Sony’s last Pro console version.
The PS5 Pro launched in early November 2024 and sold well in that first month. At launch, thePS5 Pro sold as well as the PS4 Pro, despite costing $300 more. However, it’s now looking like the system wasn’t able to maintain that trend.
Gaming industry analyst Mat Piscatella noted on Bluesky that, as of July 10, 2025, the PS5 Pro is lagging behind what the PS4 Pro sold in the same timeframe. Piscatella did not provide specific numbers, and Sony has not made the PS5 Pro’s sales figures public, but the console’s high price and an industry-wide decline in hardware sales could play a part in the dip. The console has also experienced some performance problems, although Sony saidit’s working on a fix for the PS5 Pro’s issuesand not all games suffered from them.
The PS5 Pro Is Supposedly No Longer Selling as Well as the PS4 Pro
Earlier in his thread, Piscatella did say that overall PS5 hardware spending had dropped by 38% year-over-year, which likely contributed to the PS5 Pro falling behind the PS4 Pro’s pace. This decline isn’t unique to Sony, though. According to Piscatella, the Xbox Series X and S saw a 50% decline and the Switch fell by 53% in the same period. Gaming hardware has struggled to keep up with software lately, with allconsole sales falling by 21% in Europein 2024.
Whether the PS5 Pro’s sales will recover or how Sony will proceed from here is uncertain. There are rumors thata PlayStation handheld could release alongside the PS6, but there’s no official news on the matter for now. Amid declining hardware sales, Xbox has shifted to focus on its software products, and Nintendo has the upcoming Switch 2 to potentially drive sales when it releases later in 2025.
It’s worth considering that the PS4 Pro sold rather well. Despite being an upgrade and not an entirely new system, it moved an impressive number of consoles, so the PS5 Pro falling behind its pace is not dramatic news. Considering how the industry as a whole has seen a drop in hardware spending, such a decline is to be expected to some degree.