Sonyand Microsoft seem to be at odds with each other, with both parties attempting to make big moves against the competition on every possible front. Most of the time healthy competition ultimately benefits the end-consumer, but it seems thatSony’s recent moves might not be an inherent positive.

While not confirmed and possibly false, documents recently surfaced online stating Sony and Capcom have some kind of agreement prohibiting Capcom from addingthe heavily-anticipatedResident Evil Villageto Xbox Game Pass for a year. In light of recent decisions and announcements made by the company, this seems a pretty bad move to compensate for a Game Pass competitor.

resident evil village xbox game pass

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Xbox Game Pass has been rapidly growing in popularity, mostly thanks to Xbox’s continued push to make the service a viable alternative to conventional gaming. The tech giant has already made its point by makingOutridersandMLB The Show 21available on the service at launch. Sony and Capcom’s unverified documentation seems to hint that Microsoft might be eyeing aResident Evil Villagedeal, which seems plausible.

If these documents are to be believed, Sony’s approach to combating Game Pass seems to be arguably non-competitive. In spite of at least making the game available on its service, prohibiting less fortunate gamers who rely on Game Pass for the majority of their gaming consumption is certainly a bad move. In addition to this, Sony’s recent decisions have garnered a lot of fan backlash, such asthe PS3, PSP, and PS Vita store shutdown. The backlash became so severe that Sony evidently reversed its decision.

PS Plus Destruction Allstars Feb 2021

Sony seems to be overly reliant on developing big-budget games that are bound to sell well. Sonydownsized its Japan studioand forced a significant restructuring at Bend Studio; by both rejecting aDays Gone 2pitch in favor of a new franchise, as well as becoming a supporting role for Naughty Dog’s projects. A lot of this certainly comes out as Sony being distant from its community, and theResident Evildeal adds to that.

Sony Is Silently Making Small Moves For A Change

In addition to this, originalGod of War creator David Jaffe has said that Sony is currently working on a potential competitorto Microsoft’s Xbox Game Pass service. Of course, it is understandable that building such platforms requires huge capital, and will probably take some time. For the time being, Sony should instead focus on dumping more and more resources into its PS Plus/PS Now services, which could very well be its saving grace until the rumored competitor sees the light of day.

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