Sony's recent Fiscal Year Q1'19 financials show a subtle decline in the PS4's overall potency. The system, which has now sold-in (shipped, not sold-through to consumers) exactly 100 million units across the globe, still tops the charts but will soon be overshadowed by its mighty PS5 next-gen successor. Sony's figures reflect the company's decision to start ramping down the PS4's lifecycle so it can live on through the next console.
Digital games and DLC, microtransactions, and subscriptions eclipsed hardware by 73 billion yen in Q1'19, pulling in 215,964 billion yen ($2 billion) or roughly half of total games segment earnings. Conversely, PS4 sales hardware made 142,180 billion yen ($1.31 billion) in the period, or just 32% of total Games and Network Services segment earnings. The segment also saw a slight drop in earnings year-over-year, too. Total segment sales dropped 3% to 457.5 billion yen ($4.25 billion) and operating income dropped by $89 million to 73.8 billion yen ($684.91 million) thanks to the lack of first-party games like God of War in the same year-ago period. As a result of hardware sales trends and expected earnings, Sony dropped its total FY2019 games guidance by 100 billion yen to 2.20 trillion yen.



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