Sony's latest financial report reveals it has sold 3.3 million PS5s over the last three months, bringing the grand total of new-gen consoles sold to 13.4 million.

We are now just a couple of weeks away from the first anniversary of the PS5's launch. Odds are there are still plenty of you out there reading this who continue to wait in virtual queues, and perhaps even a few real ones, whenever and wherever the console is in stock. However, 12 months later, so many people continue to come up short.

Despite reports new-gen consoles could be hard to find throughout 2022 and into 2023, the PS5's numbers continue to go from strength to strength. Sony has shared the numbers from its latest financial report, covering July through September of this year, and it has sold 3.3 million more PS5 consoles. That brings the grand total up to 13.4 million sold so far.

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ps5
via Sony

Sony's games and network division generated $5.86 billion in revenue and $751 million in profit during that period. It's the company's most successful Q2 ever, and the best non-holiday quarter it has ever had. 76.4 million PlayStation games (across PS4 and PS5) were sold during the three-month period, 7.6 million of which were first-party titles.

Spider-Man: Miles Morales is still responsible for the bulk of the PS5's first-party sales, shifting 6.5 million copies so far. It's probably going to be a while until Miles is dethroned. The web-slinger's closest competitors right now are Demon's Souls (1.4 million) and Ratchet & Clank: Rift Apart (1.1 million). It may well be a record Miles Morales holds and continues to build on until Spider-Man 2 comes to PS5 in 2023.

As for PS Plus, PlayStation reports its monthly active users dropped for the third quarter in a row. 104 million last quarter, down from 105 million the quarter before that. The smallest decline of the three, and one PlayStation will probably not be all that worried about. When quizzed on why it thought there had been a drop between quarters earlier this year, PlayStation attributed it to non and casual gamers signing up during worldwide lockdowns last year and not sticking around now the pandemic is winding down.

Source: ResetEra

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