PlayStation Portal Can Stream Your PS5 Games Without a PS5 Now

3 hours ago 2

Handheld game consoles are seeing a wild evolution lately, from the Nintendo Switch 2 to PC handhelds running Windows and Steam. Meanwhile, Sony's almost-standalone two-year-old handheld, the PlayStation Portal, is getting an update that frees it up from the PlayStation 5 for cloud streaming PS5 games, provided you have the right subscription. It's getting 3D audio support for streaming games, too.

It still won't play downloaded games offline, though. The Portal is a streaming-only handheld, but this new update looks to make it feel a lot more like a second device than a PlayStation 5 accessory. And it raises a question: Will Sony eventually make a true handheld of its own?

"The Portal is part of the PS5 family, and it continues to be a complementary device for a console not really a standalone yet," Takuro Fushimi, Sony's PlayStation senior manager of product management, told me over video chat. But the streaming update could let someone with one account play PS5 games while someone else played on an another account on the PS5, so it's definitely becoming more untethered. The Portal is also currently Sony's top-used device for streaming PS5 games, even over phones and tablets, Fushimi said, although specific sales numbers weren't shared.

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A new network status overlay also shows streaming strength while playing games.

Sony

Streaming with a subscription: Works like it does on the PS5

The new cloud streaming update is the first time Sony's considering it out of beta since the feature emerged in 2024. Previously, the Portal could cloud-stream a selection of older games via a PlayStation Plus subscription in addition to streaming games from a synced PlayStation 5.

Now, a subset of owned PlayStation 5 games will also get full cloud-streaming support without needing the PS5 to be turned on at all. The game library support matches what's already possible on PS5 already, and the new streamable games will be laid out in a new interface.

You need a PlayStation Plus Premium subscription to get access to these streamable games, though, which costs $18 a month or $160 a year.

How it's different from other ways to play PlayStation games on the go

The Portal and the PS5 are the only two consoles that have PS5 cloud streaming support, but phones and tablets can remote-play locally streamed games on a PlayStation 5 using an app which works with game controllers. There are some PlayStation games that are on Steam and can be played on Steam Decks and Windows game handhelds, too.

The Portal has its own advantages, though. The adaptive force-feedback triggers and vibrating haptics mirror the DualSense controller's feel, something you can't get otherwise. The new software update also supports 3D audio with plugged-in headphones or wireless Pulse headsets paired with Portal. But it's still a streaming-only device.

Could Sony have a true handheld next?

The Portal's evolution keeps making me wonder whether we'll see a true handheld standalone successor to the PSP and PS Vita. I asked Fushimi about Sony's stance in handhelds now compared to the rest of the evolving landscape. "We have our own sort of way of thinking about handheld," Fushimi said. "The streaming and remote play is the way we went to offer that immersion and quality of the PS5 family as a whole for this device." 

So yes, it's still a PS5 accessory. But it's closer than ever to being a handheld of its own.

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