According to leaked documents, Sony sold 14.3 million units of the PlayStation 4 Pro as of January 2020. So, for every PS4 Pro unit sold, 7 base PlayStation 4 units flew off the store shelves. It's a respectable number for a then-unexplored mid-generation "refresh." It also explains why Sony is looking to replicate the PS4 Pro's success with a PlayStation 5 Pro. But so far, the most recent rumblings aren't good for the upcoming console.

As per GamesIndustry.biz's Christopher Dring, he hadn't met a "single person" at this year's Game Developers Conference that see the need for a PS5 Pro.

In Dring's own words, "many feel they're not really making the most out of the PS5 in the first place."

To be fair, Dring's sources has a valid point. There's a list of reasons why the PS5 Pro shouldn't happen.

The PS4 Pro was released four years into the PS4's lifecycle to save it from a growing number of games pushing its performance to its limits. At the same time, 4K resolution was starting to become mainstream. The PS4 Pro was Sony capitalizing on an obvious need. The best part was that it came at an attractive price point, effectively replacing the PS4's launch price at $399.99. Meanwhile, the base model, which was the PS4 Slim already at the time, dropped to $299 for the 1TB model.