PlayStation Network Is Still Down After 14+ Hours With No Official Communication [UPDATE – It’s Back Up]

Feb 8, 2025 at 09:36am EST
PlayStation Network

[UPDATE] After 20 hours of downtime, the PlayStation Network is back online worldwide, as confirmed in a new update shared on X. The reason behind the long outage hasn't been revealed.

[ORIGINAL STORY] Last night, the PlayStation Network went offline worldwide, preventing players not only from playing online games, but also digital games in some cases, and it definitely feels like something other than a DDoS attack may have happened.

Related Story Bungie Pulls the Plug on Destiny 2 After a Decade as June 9 Update Marks Its Final Major Content Drop

At the time of writing, the PlayStation online services have been down for over 14 hours worldwide with no communication from Sony other than a simple acknowledgment that the PlayStation Network is indeed down. Over the past few hours, some users managed to get back online and access their accounts and the PlayStation Store, but no online play has been possible for the vast majority of games, including the ongoing Monster Hunter Wilds open beta.

The almost complete lack of communication from Sony and the prolonged PlayStation Network outage immediately brings to mind April 2011's outage when the PlayStation online services stayed offline for 21 days due to an attack from hackers where 77 million accounts were compromised, and personal details were stolen.

To compensate players for the outage, Sony launched a Welcome Back program, which offered a month-long PlayStation Plus free membership and a month extension for free users and two free games for each user, among a total of five PlayStation 3 games and four PlayStation Portable games. Hopefully, the new outage hasn't been caused by another hacking attack, and the service will return shortly with a proper explanation of what has happened.

This incident, however, may pale in comparison to an alleged massive security flaw that may have put PlayStation Network accounts at risk.

About the author: Francesco De Meo has been covering video games and technology since 2012, starting his career at small outlets like Gamersyndrome and GeekSnack. After joining Wccftech gaming section in 2015, he quickly expanded his video gaming coverage with in-depth reporting, interviews with iconic industry figures such as Grasshopper Manufacture founder and No More Heroes creator Goichi "Suda51" Suda, Resident Evil series creator Shinji Mikami, Team NINJA's president and Nioh series director Fumihiko Yasuda, and Silent Hill creator Keiichiro Toyama, reviews and on-the-ground coverage of major industry events such as Gamescom and E3. When he's not reporting or reviewing, Francesco can be found playing the genres he loves most, spending time with his six cats, reading, writing music, playing guitar and drumming for his progressive rock band.

Follow Wccftech on Google to get more of our news coverage in your feeds.