![]() ![]() The update was published on June 10 and basically describes how legacy PS1, PS2, and PS3 games could support a revolutionary new gameplay sharing functionality that lets you create, edit, and share slices of your game as interactive and playable demos. ![]() But it's the new updated portion of the patent that's most interesting, and it's the part that most websites simply didn't notice. It's always been obvious PS Now would be supported on PS5 and that's always been a method for backward compatibility on the next-gen system. ![]() ![]() You've probably seen headlines like "new patent will allow PS1, PS2, and PS3 games to play on PS5." The reality is that this original patent is rather old-it was filed in December 2013, a year before PlayStation Now launched, and claimed in 2012-and explicitly describes game streaming on PS Now. A new Sony patent has been making the rounds and lots of publications are reporting on it.
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