PlayStation players have been locked out of the original Call of Duty: Black Ops and Black Ops 2 for two full console generations. That changes this July.
Treyarch officially announced that both games are coming to PlayStation 4 and PlayStation 5, with ports handled by Iron Galaxy. The announcement lands hot on the heels of earlier rumors that had been circulating earlier this month, and it confirms what a lot of PlayStation fans were hoping to hear. If you've been playing Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 and wondering where the franchise's roots are, you're about to find out firsthand.

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Two decades of PlayStation absence
Black Ops launched in November 2010 and Black Ops 2 followed in November 2012. Both were available on PlayStation 3 at the time, but neither made the jump to PS4 or PS5. Xbox players, meanwhile, kept access to the older titles through backward compatibility across console generations. For PlayStation owners, playing these games meant either dusting off a PS3 or skipping them entirely.
That two-generation gap is a long time in gaming. Players who started on PS4 have never had a native way to experience the original Black Ops campaigns, the iconic multiplayer maps, or Zombies modes that built much of the franchise's reputation.
Ports, not remasters
Here's the thing: these are straight ports, not remasters. Iron Galaxy is handling the work, and Treyarch has been upfront that players shouldn't expect dramatic visual upgrades. The games will run on modern PlayStation hardware, but the core experience will be the same as it was on PS3.
That's not necessarily a bad thing. Both games hold up well in terms of design, and the multiplayer communities for these titles have remained vocal about wanting access on modern platforms. What most players miss about the original Black Ops era is the map design and the tighter, more grounded feel of the gameplay, and that's all present in these ports.
Where the Black Ops series stands right now
The Black Ops franchise has moved fast in recent years. Black Ops 6 released in 2024, followed by Black Ops 7 in 2025, making it the first time the sub-series shipped in back-to-back years. For 2026, the franchise is taking a breather as Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 4 takes the annual slot, with a release set for October 23 across Xbox Series X|S, PS5, Switch 2, and PC.
The timing of these ports makes sense in that context. With no new Black Ops title on the 2026 calendar, bringing the originals to PlayStation keeps the franchise visible and gives a new generation of players a reason to engage with where it all started.
If you're looking to brush up on the current era of the franchise before the ports drop, the Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 guides are a solid place to start. And for broader shooter games coverage heading into the second half of 2026, there's plenty more to track as Modern Warfare 4 approaches its October launch.








