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Tech/Software
Sony tests new PS5 UI with dedicated Store and Plus tabs

7 April 2026

—

News

Carter Brooks

Sony has quietly started testing a redesigned PlayStation 5 user interface with a select group of players around the world, no official announcement yet, just the kind of soft rollout that makes you check your console twice to see if you've received the update.

The updated UI swaps out the old two-tab layout (Games and Media) for dedicated tabs covering PS Plus, the PlayStation Store, and Library, all accessible with the L1 and R1 shoulder buttons. It's a shift from icon-heavy navigation to something that feels more like actual organizational logic. Early testers say it's cleaner and less cluttered, though Sony hasn't made any official statement about when, or if, the rest of us will see it.

The redesign could make it faster to jump into subscription content and digital purchases, which is exactly what Sony wants as it leans harder into services over hardware. By giving PS Plus and the Store their own real estate, you're less likely to get lost in submenus hunting for that game you swear you downloaded last month. It's the kind of quality-of-life tweak that won't blow your mind but might save you thirty seconds of frustration each session. Over a year, that adds up.

Players who've stumbled into the test build describe it as "more intuitive" and "closer to a console OS you'd expect on a phone." Sony, for its part, has offered zero official comment. No blog post, no roadmap, no clarification on whether this becomes the default experience or remains an experiment that quietly disappears like so many beta features before it.

This test is reaching a small, undisclosed slice of the PS5 install base; Sony isn't saying how small. What we do know: earlier this year, the company announced price increases of $100 to $150 for the PS5 Slim and PS5 Pro models as of April 2, a clear signal that both hardware margins and service revenue are under scrutiny. A streamlined UI that funnels users toward PS Plus and the Store isn't just good design, it's good business.

Most industry watchers expect Sony to expand the interface gradually, possibly tying the full rollout to the PS5 Pro launch later this year. Until then, your best bet for staying in the loop is watching for in-console notifications and checking community forums where testers tend to spill details faster than official channels ever will. If you're not seeing the new tabs yet, don't worry. You're in the majority, and probably will be for a while.

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What is this about?

  • News/
  • Carter Brooks/
  • Tech/
  • Software/
  • Console firmware update/
  • consumer reaction to price changes/
  • Console UI Redesign/
  • Service Integration

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Tech/Software

Sony tests new PS5 UI with dedicated Store and Plus tabs

7 April 2026

—

News

Carter Brooks

Sony has quietly started testing a redesigned PlayStation 5 user interface with a select group of players around the world, no official announcement yet, just the kind of soft rollout that makes you check your console twice to see if you've received the update.

The updated UI swaps out the old two-tab layout (Games and Media) for dedicated tabs covering PS Plus, the PlayStation Store, and Library, all accessible with the L1 and R1 shoulder buttons. It's a shift from icon-heavy navigation to something that feels more like actual organizational logic. Early testers say it's cleaner and less cluttered, though Sony hasn't made any official statement about when, or if, the rest of us will see it.

The redesign could make it faster to jump into subscription content and digital purchases, which is exactly what Sony wants as it leans harder into services over hardware. By giving PS Plus and the Store their own real estate, you're less likely to get lost in submenus hunting for that game you swear you downloaded last month. It's the kind of quality-of-life tweak that won't blow your mind but might save you thirty seconds of frustration each session. Over a year, that adds up.

Players who've stumbled into the test build describe it as "more intuitive" and "closer to a console OS you'd expect on a phone." Sony, for its part, has offered zero official comment. No blog post, no roadmap, no clarification on whether this becomes the default experience or remains an experiment that quietly disappears like so many beta features before it.

This test is reaching a small, undisclosed slice of the PS5 install base; Sony isn't saying how small. What we do know: earlier this year, the company announced price increases of $100 to $150 for the PS5 Slim and PS5 Pro models as of April 2, a clear signal that both hardware margins and service revenue are under scrutiny. A streamlined UI that funnels users toward PS Plus and the Store isn't just good design, it's good business.

Most industry watchers expect Sony to expand the interface gradually, possibly tying the full rollout to the PS5 Pro launch later this year. Until then, your best bet for staying in the loop is watching for in-console notifications and checking community forums where testers tend to spill details faster than official channels ever will. If you're not seeing the new tabs yet, don't worry. You're in the majority, and probably will be for a while.

What is this about?

  • News/
  • Carter Brooks/
  • Tech/
  • Software/
  • Console firmware update/
  • consumer reaction to price changes/
  • Console UI Redesign/
  • Service Integration

Feed

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