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Ghost Of Tsushima delisted by PlayStation without warning, leaving millions of fans furious
Home>News
Published 10:12 13 May 2024 GMT+1

Ghost Of Tsushima delisted by PlayStation without warning, leaving millions of fans furious

Sony is back in player's bad books

Angharad Redden

Angharad Redden

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Featured Image Credit: Sucker Punch Productions

Topics: Ghost Of Tsushima, Sucker Punch, PlayStation, Sony, PC

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With the Ghost of Tsushima making its long-awaited arrival to PC this week, PlayStation users are not happy after the title was delisted by Sony without any warning.

Arriving to PC on 16 May, Ghost of Tsushima is about to get its time in the spotlight once again since it was first released for the PlayStation 4 and PlayStation 5 back in 2020.

Ghost of Tsushima arrives on PC for some players on 16 May!

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Telling the story of Jin Sakai, a samurai operating during the first Mongol invasion of Japan, the action-adventure game by Sucker Punch Productions went on to be positively received and still sits at a very impressive 9.1 user score on Metacritic.

However, it appears as though millions of players will not even get to play Ghost of Tsushima after Sony seemingly delisted it in over 100 countries just days before its PC release.

You may be wondering why Sony’s decision affects PC users but this is because Ghost of Tsushima will require a PSN account for its multiplayer mode. However, with single-player still being accessible in offline mode and without the need of a PSN account, many players believed they could still play the game.

Needless to say, this is now not the case as Sony has completely delisted the game in selected countries rather than just restrict its online mode.

Even more shockingly, up until the game was delisted, the affected countries still had the option to pre-order the game. We imagine they will be able to get refunds but this is still a kick in the teeth for those who were excited to play.

With countries such as Georgia, Egypt, the Dominican Republic and more now unable to access Ghost of Tsushima at all, it seems as though Sony has some explaining to do.

Hopefully, the decision gets overturned such as what happened earlier this month when Helldivers 2 players were told they would need a PSN account to continue playing.

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