Reports about Sony gearing up to release a "Pro" version of the PlayStation 5 console next year have begun swirling. Coming from a fairly well researched analysis, this prediction doesn't seem at all outlandish considering Pro versions of Sony's consoles do have a way of popping up after a few years - however, such a move would be crazy in the current market.
A global chip shortage, constant hardware droughts, soaring tech prices, supply chain issues exasperated by a pandemic that some governments are trying to downplay, recent accidents impacting the output of key semiconductor factories and an ever present inability to get consoles onto store shelves ever since this generation started are just some of the glaring issues with this plan.
How exactly does Sony envision the PlayStation 5 Pro actually making its way to consumers at MSRP when the current version of the PS5, out since November 2020, is still struggling to do so? Forecasts about the state of the chip shortage for the coming year are still contradictory - not even the experts can tell if manufacturing will be able to finally catch up with demand.
If the analysis is correct regarding Sony's plans for a 2023 launch, then pretty much all of the planning and development work would need to be ready at this point, meaning the company has all pipeline concerns figured out - or, at least, they think they do.


