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Sony's old-school console was a titan for a reason, now if only we could play some of these on the PS5! Grand Theft Auto ...
Bandai Namco announced a set of Sony Interactive Entertainment Edition PS1 and PS2 keychains that look like game boxes.
While GTA may reign as the supreme king of PS2 open-world games, these forgotten titles deserve their time in the sun.
Released in 2000, Sony embraced the multimedia experience by offering support for DVDs. This was a big deal because the PS2 actually became one of the cheaper DVD players on the market at the time.
Yes, the PS2 could work with most televisions of its era, but what not too many know is that Sony itself made television that many called a PlayStation television. This was the Bravia KDL-22PX300.
While it’s possible that the PS4 will overtake it, the PS2 is currently Sony’s best-selling console. It deserves a bigger part of PlayStation’s present, and whatever its future ends up holding.
Mystic talks at length about how one of the reasons Sony hasn’t been putting PS2 classics onto the PS5 is “a matter of them just probably not having a brand-new PlayStation 2 emulator.
If Sony does make PS2 backward compatibility official, we'll probably only see a few core games included at the start, so that means most of the most obscure (and best) J-RPG's probably won't be ...
In a recent Tweet, Sony asked what PS2 games people want made available via the new PS4 emulation setup. How about all of them? Now, to clarify, I am talking about disc-based emulation here. As in ...
PS2 sales are also important because they get gamers comfortable and happy with the Sony name and then when they're ready—it's time for a PS3. That's the theory, at least.
Sony is hopping on the last-gen emulation bandwagon -- except, it's jumping back twice as far. PS2 emulation is going to roll out to the PS4.