Direct answer: There is ongoing reporting about Sony’s rollout of age verification for PlayStation Network features, including UK cases, with multiple verification methods and potential impact on online features like messaging and voice chat.
Details and context:
- What’s happening: Sony is introducing an age verification requirement for certain online PlayStation features as part of compliance with age-assurance measures. In the UK, this has begun and may affect features beyond gameplay, including communications and party features.[3][4][5]
- How verification may work: Sony is partnering with a third-party identity provider (Yoti) and is reportedly offering methods such as facial age estimation, ID upload, or mobile-based verification to confirm age before accessing affected features.[4][5][3]
- What could be restricted: If age verification isn’t completed, users may lose access to online features like voice chat, text chat/messaging, joining parties, and streaming/broadcasting gameplay to platforms (though single-player game access generally remains).[5][3]
- Scope and timelines: The coverage appears to target the UK and Ireland initially, with broader regulatory drivers cited (e.g., UK Online Safety Act). Some outlets mention that the rollout could be expanded and that other regions may implement similar age-check requirements in the future.[9][3]
- User guidance: Notifications and prompts are being issued to users to complete verification; responses suggest it’s a one-time step, and some scenarios allow continued access to core game and store services even if age verification is incomplete, though online communications are restricted.[4][5]
What this means for you (practical points):
- If you play primarily offline or single-player titles, you’ll likely remain able to play without completing the checks, but online features may be unavailable until verification is done.[5]
- If you rely on voice chat, messaging, or streaming from your PS5/PS4, you may be prompted to verify your age to continue using those features, especially in the UK and Ireland.[3][5]
- Verification options vary; expect to provide some combination of facial verification, ID, or provider data. Privacy details are being discussed in coverage, so review the official Sony support materials for specifics and data handling policies.[8][3]
Illustrative example:
- A UK-based PSN user who regularly chats with friends online might see a verification prompt and, upon successful completion, regain full access to messaging and voice chat; if they skip verification, those features could be partially or fully restricted, though their installed games remain accessible.[3][5]
Caveats:
- Exact feature lists and timelines are evolving; Sony has not published a single definitive feature-by-feature manifest publicly, and different outlets are tracking updates as they unfold.[9][3]
- Always check the official PlayStation support pages for the most current guidance and your regional applicability: US/EU/UK variants may differ in scope and timing.[8]
If you want, I can pull the latest official Sony statements and summarize any region-specific requirements you care about (e.g., US vs UK), and I can monitor for updates over the next few days.