If you were hoping the European Union might step in and protect your physical game collection, here's the bad news: it's not happening.
Michael McGrath, the EU Commissioner for Democracy, Justice, the Rule of Law, and Consumer Protection, addressed reporters at the European Parliament in Strasbourg this week and made the EU's position clear. Sony, and any other game company, is free to move to digital-only distribution as long as consumer rights are protected under national and EU law.
"It does come down to commercial and contractual freedoms, and companies are free to offer games and services in the manner that they see fit, provided that consumer rights are fully protected in line with national and EU law," McGrath stated.
That's a firm door closing on any regulatory intervention.

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How Sony's disc cutoff became a political question
Sony announced earlier this month that physical disc production for all PlayStation 5 games will end starting in January 2028. Games released in 2027 or earlier can still get disc reprints, but anything after that point is digital only. Full stop.
The announcement triggered immediate backlash from physical media fans. A petition calling on Sony to reverse the decision has now passed 285,000 signatures, a number that sounds significant until you run the actual math.
Market analyst Dr. Serkan Toto put it bluntly: Sony has over 120 million active PlayStation users, with around 50 million subscribing to PlayStation Plus. Even if 500,000 people cancelled their subscriptions in protest, that represents just 1% of that business. "Sony has over 120 million active PlayStation users," Toto noted. "They of course knew what the online reaction would look like, and they now wait for this storm to pass."
The protest cancellations, while visible and vocal online, are unlikely to register as a financial threat at that scale.
The Stop Killing Games decision that set the tone
McGrath's comments didn't arrive in a vacuum. Last month, the European Commission decided not to propose legislation requiring games to remain playable after developers shut them down, a direct response to the Stop Killing Games movement that had pushed for exactly that protection.
The commissioner acknowledged that the commission had considered a European Citizens' Initiative on game availability after new editions launch, but the outcome was the same: no new laws. The EU's position, taken as a whole, is that the games industry operates within existing consumer protection frameworks, and those frameworks don't require companies to maintain physical formats.
For PS5 owners who care about owning a physical copy of a game, this is the regulatory answer they didn't want. You can check our Starfield PS5 guide for a sense of how the platform's digital ecosystem is already shaping the way major titles land on PlayStation.
What physical media fans are actually up against
Here's the thing: the economics aren't on their side. Digital distribution cuts out manufacturing, shipping, and retail margins entirely. For Sony, the shift to digital isn't just a preference, it's a structural financial advantage that compounds over time.
The petition numbers are real, but the business case for reversal isn't there. Toto's 1% thought experiment is a useful gut check. Passionate communities online can feel like majorities. They rarely are when measured against a 120 million user base.
Sony has also told developers they can still produce discs for older titles, which softens the blow slightly for back-catalogue releases. But new games from 2028 onward? Digital only.
The EU commissioner's statement this week effectively closes the last realistic avenue for outside intervention. There's no incoming legislation, no regulatory review, and no political appetite to mandate physical formats in the games industry.
For players who want to stay ahead of how Sony's ecosystem is evolving, our gaming guides cover the platform shifts that actually affect how you play. And if you're already navigating Sony's digital infrastructure and running into errors, the Fortnite Esp-Dist-001 error fix guide is one example of the platform-level troubleshooting that's becoming more common as everything moves online.
Sony's January 2028 deadline is now locked in, legally unchallenged, and backed by the kind of financial logic that tends to win long-term. The disc era on PlayStation has an expiry date.








