Sony Faces End of UK PlayStation Class Action This Week Amid US Settlements

A UK class action lawsuit against Sony over its 30 percent commission fees on digital PlayStation purchases reaches its conclusion this week. The case, valued at $2.6 billion, covers consumers who bought games via PlayStation Network from August 2016 to February 2026. This follows a separate US antitrust settlement that received preliminary approval last month.

The lawsuit claims Sony maintains a monopoly as the sole digital store for PlayStation consoles, preventing competition and resulting in higher prices for buyers. Sony has argued that cross-platform releases provide sufficient competition and that the fees help keep hardware prices lower. The company failed to dismiss the case in 2023 after an unsuccessful appeal. This UK action is distinct from a recently preliminarily approved $7.85 million class-action settlement in the US (Caccuri v. Sony Interactive Entertainment) covering eligible PlayStation Network users who purchased certain digital games or vouchers from 2019 to 2023.

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Federal judge approving $7.85M Sony PlayStation antitrust settlement in courtroom, with PS5 console, controllers, and store credits on bench.
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US court preliminarily approves $7.85 million Sony PlayStation digital games antitrust settlement

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A federal judge in the Northern District of California has granted preliminary approval to a $7.85 million class-action settlement against Sony Interactive Entertainment over alleged anticompetitive practices on the PlayStation Store. Eligible US PlayStation Network users who bought certain digital games or vouchers from April 1, 2019, to December 31, 2023, could receive automatic store credits or refunds, even if accounts are inactive (contact lawyers if former user). A final fairness hearing is set for October 15, 2026.

Sony has reached a class action settlement worth $8 million for PlayStation gamers. The agreement offers a modest payout to eligible players and is part of a series of US and UK antitrust actions against the company.

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A class action complaint was filed against Sony Interactive Entertainment in a California federal court, alleging the company stands to gain an improper financial benefit from tariff refunds. The suit claims consumers should receive the money instead after paying higher prices for PlayStation 5 consoles.

Google has reached a preliminary $135 million settlement in the class-action lawsuit Taylor v. Google LLC, which accused the company of transferring data from Android phones without users' permission, using cellular data. The agreement covers U.S. Android users with cellular plans from November 12, 2017, onward. A final approval hearing is set for June 23.

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Sony raised the price of its PlayStation 5 consoles on April 2, with the cheapest model now starting at an MSRP of $600. However, the Fortnite Flowering Chaos PS5 Bundle remains available on PlayStation Direct for the previous sale price of $400. The bundle features the all-digital edition without a disc drive and includes exclusive cosmetics for Fortnite.

The U.S. Supreme Court has refused to hear Apple's appeal in its long-running legal battle with Epic Games. The decision upholds a lower court finding that Apple violated an injunction by limiting third-party payment options on iOS devices.

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Insider Gaming has uncovered evidence of Sony's PlayStation Store implementing dynamic pricing, with the same game offered at significantly different prices to users in the same region. Screenshots show Stellar Blade priced at $39.89 for some and $20.99 for others, compared to its original $69.99 tag. Sony has not officially commented on the changes.

 

 

 

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