I'm pretty much out at this point.
I haven't been a big fan of the PS5 since it came out, but bought one back in 2021 since I figured the system would gain more and more value in terms of quality exclusives and multiple releases. We've no doubt had some of those, but I still struggle with the value proposition between what I paid for my new PS5 and how much enjoyment I've got out of it. This news guarantees I'm not buying a single brand new first party Sony game ever again, even physically. As for when everything goes digital only, I'm done buying new games on the PS5 period. This push towards a digital only future is some of the most anti-consumer, anti-ownership BS I've ever experienced, and it's clear greed is the primary factor behind it. I'm not paying Sony or anyone for a license that they can revoke when they feel like it. I'm also not buying a PS6 whenever that ends up coming out. Even if by some miracle it did support physical discs or media, the damn thing is probably going to cost $1200+ given the direction flash storage and RAM prices have been going. If I'm still struggling to see the value proposition on my PS5, there's no way in hell I'm ever going to get that with a PS6, again, assuming it actually supported physical media, which the news about the PS5 100% guarantees it won't.
As for Microsoft and Nintendo, MS has been irrelevant in my eyes since the XBONE came out like 13 years ago. I bought a used $50 XBOX just to play the dozen or so semi-exclusives it has, most of which are Halo games. Nintendo has really left a bad taste in my mouth recently with the key card crap they pulled with the Switch 2. I'm not going to lie, Star Fox and OoT remake have really tempted me to want to buy one, however I'm worried I'm going to run into the same issue I have with my PS5 where the value proposition may not be there. I refuse to buy key card games, which leaves me with just exclusive Nintendo games (not even all of them either mind you) and the handful of third party publishers that decided to go the non-key card route. I have some thoughts about where the future of gaming is headed with the XBOX brand all but being dead and this recent new from Sony, but how it relates to Nintendo is I feel they'll possibly be the only viable console manufacturer left standing, mostly do to cost. With have a virtual monopoly, they have no incentive to cater to the minority of gamers who strongly value physical media and ownership, and will likely end up going the same route as Sony during the Switch 2's life, or only offering Key Card games on new releases, including all first party titles.
I think the saddest part about all this is this unfortunate news doesn't sting as much as I thought I would. That's probably because I've been watching the game industry get progressively worse and worse for the past 20 years, but certainly with a sharp acceleration in the past 5 or 6 years. I'd all but accepted this was where gaming was going to end up. I suppose I thought we'd at least get through the current console generation before Sony and I suppose Xbox completely pulled the plug ion physical games. In terms of where this leaves me, it pretty much means I'm mostly done with modern gaming, at least from the AAA and AA space. It also really dampens my desire to even get a Switch 2, which has become the last bastion of physical ownership within gaming. I wish it ended there, but sadly this sort of just sours me on gaming in general. No, I'm not quitting video games, I probably couldn't even if I wanted to. It does however mean my enthusiasm for the medium has become damaged to say the least and I guess we'll see how this all plays out for me as time goes by.
Beyond just video games, I really hate how most of entertainment (and society as a whole) has just got worse and worse in general. It really makes you wonder where this is all headed and what the end stage of it all looks like. It makes looking back on the 90s and early 2000s feel like they occurred a century ago given how radically different things feel now, and in many ways how they objectively are radically different.