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Why the time is right for a Sony PlayStation Phone
July 23, 2025
It’s no secret Sony is struggling to find any kind of solid foothold in the modern smartphone market. Arecent sales reportpaints a bleak picture for the Japanese giant’s mobile division, but in truth, Sony has struggled for close to a decade to keep pace with industry leaders like Samsung, Apple, andmore recentlyHUAWEI.
There are many, many plausible explanations for Sony’s continued poor performance, from pricing, to non-existent marketing, tonot keeping pace with design trends. No matter the disease, the company needs to find a cure if it wants to compete.

Sony’s Xperia family underwent a minor reboot with the transition from the Z-series to the X-seriesjust over two years ago, but it wasn’t enough. Sony needs something bold and exciting to grab attention — something capitalizing on acurrent trendand also playing into the wider company’s brand legacy.
It needs a PlayStation Phone.
PlayStation Phone: Wait, haven’t we been here before?
Let’s take a quick trip back in time to early 2011 and the release of the Sony Xperia Play. Widely dubbed the “PlayStation Phone” in pre-releasecoverage, the Xperia Play was a strange hybrid of Ericsson-era Sony phones and the ill-fated PlayStation Portable handheld, thePSP Go.
Outfitted with a slide-out controller setup and shoulder buttons, the Xperia Play launched to much fanfare and quickly faded into obscurity.

Despite offering “Xperia Play-optimized” Android games and a handful of classic PlayStation titles through the PlayStation Pocket app, a general lack of support and the rapid advancement of gaming and mobile hardware left the Xperia Play as a one-off curiosity — an odd experiment in cross-brand splicing that failed to generate sales or lasting hype.
Nowadays, Sony’s gaming focus on mobile is scattershot to say the least. Xperia devices supportRemote Playwith PS4 consoles so you can play AAA games on your Xperia phone or tablet. You can even strap an official DualShock controller mount to your device, Frankenstein-style, and play said games with an actual PS4 controller.

There’s also thePlayStation app— essentially a barebones hub for your PlayStation account — the PSN Store, andPlayStation Messages, which barely works and probably shouldn’t exist.
While you can technically play console games on the go on an Xperia phone or tablet, the lag and awkward peripheral design are deal breakers for many consumers. Much like the rest of Sony’s mobile strategy, it can andshouldbe doing better, and a fully-fledged PlayStation Phone could be just the ticket.

PlayStation Phone: Why now?
The obvious answer is money. In the same quarter that its mobile division almost halved its global smartphone sales year-on-year, Sony raked in $1.8 billion in profit, thelion’s shareof which came from the company’s PlayStation wing.
In any industry, branding is key. In the mobile industry, where the Xperia name means very little to consumers. In the gaming space, PlayStation is currently king. Bringing the brand into the mobile space could be what Sony needs to reignite interest in its mobile products.

It’s the perfect time to unleash a PlayStation Phone. There’s been a recent wave of “gaming phones,” kicking off with the incredibly well-receivedRazer Phoneand continuing with theXiaomi Black Shark,HONOR Play,nubia REDMAGIC. The upcomingASUS ROG Phoneshows this trend isn’t stopping soon.
It’s a niche field, but with everyone fromSamsungtoLG(two OEMs currently on the opposite ends of the success spectrum) blaming ailing sales on smartphone design and hardware stagnation, now is a good time to try something a little different. Potentially ruling over a subsection of the smartphone market under the banner of the strongest gaming brand in the world sounds a lot better than floundering in the mainstream.
Sony has been burned by the handheld console market twice with the PSP and PS Vita — two beautifully constructed, technically impressive devices wiped off the face of the Earth by Nintendo’s cheaper, less powerful, but infinitely more accessible handheld offerings, the Nintendo DS and 3DS.
In more recent years, Nintendo’s gone all-in on portable gaming with the home console-handheld hybridNintendo Switch(with an e-shop full of mobile game ports) and by releasing Android and iOS games based on some of the company’s biggest licenses. It’s fair to saybothendeavorshave gone pretty well so far.
Like Nintendo, Sony has a wealth of intellectual properties in its back pocket for another push into the portable gaming space. It also has an entire division dedicated to mobile hardware development.
There is no company out there in a stronger position to further blur the lines between mobile and traditional gaming platforms than Sony.
PlayStation Phone: What would it actually be like?
The billion dollar question, though, is how a PlayStation Phone would look and play in 2018. Would it be more like a handheld console that also functions as a basic phone, or a traditional Android phone with top-end specs, improved controller integration, and a library of PlayStation games?
While we’ve yet to put it through its paces for a full review, theASUS ROG Phone— with its ultrasonic shoulder buttons and vapor-chamber cooling peripheral — is the most intriguing of the current batch of Android gaming phones. It’s not hard to picture a similarly styled device bearing the PlayStation logo.
Personally, I’d love to see a PlayStation Phone bring together the ambition of the PSP/Vita, the hardware expertise of the Xperia team, and the power of the PlayStation brand to create a true successor to the Xperia Play — maybe even with a Switch-inspired twist.
Modularity is still something of a dirty word in the mobile industry, but the Switch’s JoyCon controllers have been a huge hit, as has the plug-and-play nature of the console itself.
I can’t be the only one imagining a PlayStation Phone with a modular, Xperia Play-style controller attachment that plays Android games, brand new titles, and PlayStation classics, and connects up to a TV. If you need a little help on that final idea, there’s a little startup named Wonder looking for an OEM partner for itsWonderOS project.
Wrapping up
No matter what your idea of a PlayStation Phone might be (and I’d love to hear your suggestions in the comments), there’s one single, inescapable truth: Xperia is not a strong brand and it never has been.
When you think Samsung, you think Galaxy. When you think Apple, you think iPhone. When billions around the world think Sony, they don’t think Xperia, they think PlayStation.
Up next:15 best Android games of 2018!
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