PlayStation’s annual Wrap-Up has returned for 2025, giving players a breakdown of how much time they spent on their PS4 and PS5 consoles this year. The feature, now a familiar part of Sony’s end-of-year cycle, offers a snapshot of individual play habits rather than platform-wide trends, but it does reinforce how central personalized data has become to modern gaming ecosystems. Players can view their stats through January 8, with the Wrap-Up continuing to refresh until that date, and completing the rundown unlocks a glass-themed avatar.
As in previous years, the Wrap-Up highlights total hours played across single-player and multiplayer titles, along with the number of games sampled throughout the year. It also surfaces more granular details, including your most-used DualSense controller and usage patterns for accessories such as PlayStation VR2 and the PlayStation Portal. For those subscribed to PlayStation Plus Premium or Extra, Sony provides a short list of recommended games based on activity across the service, positioning the feature as both a retrospective tool and a subtle engagement nudge toward the subscription catalog.

The report doesn’t identify global rankings, but it does point to several titles that dominated player time in 2025. Ghost of Yotei, Death Stranding 2: On the Beach, Blue Prince, and Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 were notable time sinks, while releases such as Ball x Pit, Elden Ring Nightreign, and Battlefield 6 also kept players active for long stretches. Though these mentions aren’t meant as definitive metrics, they reflect the types of games that tend to draw extended play—ambient open worlds, narrative-driven sequels, and high-activity multiplayer entries.
Looking ahead, next year’s Wrap-Up will likely feature a different mix of heavy hitters. Resident Evil Requiem, 007: First Light, and Yakuza Kiwami 3 are already positioned as major releases for 2026. And assuming it avoids further delays, Grand Theft Auto 6’s planned November launch will almost certainly make it one of the most-played titles in the final months of the year, regardless of where broader trends land.
PlayStation’s 2025 Wrap-Up functions less as a marketing push and more as an annual ledger of how players spent their time, but it also shows how platform holders use personalized data to reinforce user identity within their ecosystems. As long as players continue to look back on their digital habits with interest, the Wrap-Up will remain a predictable year-end fixture.
