The kicker this gen, unlike prior, is that 5 years into the current cycle the consoles would have probably been $300 by now. The PS4 in 2018 was like $299 and you could grab $199 Black Friday deals with Spider-man. So if the PS5 was at this point, let's say $350, and 'market conditions' forced them to bump up to $400, that's better optics than the price-points being what they were at launch 5 years ago( or higher). The PS5 digital was $400 in 2020; It's now $500. So the math works out in that sense because the slim wasn't ever dropped to have wiggle room for 'market conditions'; anyone buying a PS5 digital now is paying what someone in 2020 paid *adjusted for inflation*. The problem is that consumers wages haven't gone up 25% so $500 hits us harder now than it did 5 years ago, taking into account that literally everything else is going up as well. There's just no more blood to get out of the stone anymore. Covid and now tariffs has us in a perpetual state of 'market condition' price increases. What it all amounts to, is a section of people are going to be priced out. The people who bought a PS4 last gen when it hit $299, and a bunch of $20 first party titles? They're priced out completely. I'm actually in an 'ok' position right now and I don't have a single PS5-centric game. My PS5 is pretty much a PS4 Pro PRO. Last gen I got a ton of Sony games off PSN for under $10, we're light-years past those days.