Sony has reached a settlement in the United States over its digital store practices, agreeing to pay $7.85 million in a class-action case linked to the PlayStation Store. The case focuses on how digital games have been sold on the platform over the past few years.
The dispute started after Sony made a key change in 2019. The company stopped allowing third-party retailers to sell digital game vouchers for PlayStation titles. Before this, players could often find better deals through external sellers. After the change, most digital purchases were pushed directly to the PlayStation Store.
The lawsuit claimed that this move reduced price competition and left players with fewer options, which could have led to higher prices for digital games. Sony has not admitted any wrongdoing as part of the settlement, but it has agreed to resolve the case financially.
As part of the agreement, players who bought eligible digital titles between April 1, 2019, and December 31, 2023, may receive compensation. Some well-known titles included in the eligibility list are The Last of Us Remastered, inFAMOUS: First Light, and God of War III Remastered.
The actual payout per user is expected to be limited. Early estimates suggest that players may receive a small amount per purchase, likely in the range of a few dollars. Instead of direct refunds, the compensation will be issued as PlayStation Network credits, which can be used for future purchases on the platform.
The settlement still needs final approval from the court. A hearing is currently scheduled for October 15, 2026. If approved, the process of distributing credits will begin after that.
The settlement highlights a big issue in gaming today. Digital stores are becoming closed ecosystems, and you are mostly locked into their pricing and policies. This is not just about discounts or vouchers. It is about how much control a user really has after buying a game. I have explored this in detail in my article “Why Buying Digital Games Does Not Mean Ownership Anymore.” The more platforms control distribution, the more limited that ownership becomes in practice.
The amount Sony is paying in this case feels small when you look at the size of the platform and the number of users affected. For most players, the refund will not change much. But the case itself is important because it raises questions that the industry has avoided for a long time.
Digital distribution has made gaming more convenient, but it has also reduced competition in many ways. If similar cases in Europe and the UK move forward, we could see more pressure on companies to open up their systems or allow better pricing competition.

