PlayStation State of Play June 2 2026: Everything Sony Has Officially Confirmed

Techwalla may earn compensation through affiliate links in this story. Learn more about our affiliate and product review process here.

PlayStation State of Play June 2 2026: Everything Sony Has Officially Confirmed

Sony announced today that State of Play returns Tuesday, June 2, with over 60 minutes of PS5 game coverage opening with Marvel's Wolverine. The broadcast streams free on YouTube and Twitch, and it lands ahead of a June calendar that The Verge described today as "always packed with video game events."

Beyond Wolverine, Sony has named nothing else about the lineup. What follows covers the confirmed schedule, the shape of what Sony has and hasn't disclosed, and what to watch for when the show goes live.


Advertisement

When and where to watch the State of Play June 2 livestream

Video of the Day

The broadcast is free and requires no account or registration. Start times, per the PlayStation Blog:

  • 2:00pm PT (Tuesday, June 2)
  • 5:00pm ET (Tuesday, June 2)
  • 10:00pm UK (Tuesday, June 2)
  • 11:00pm CEST (Tuesday, June 2)
  • 6:00am JST (Wednesday, June 3)

IGN independently confirmed the same start times today, with no discrepancy. The show streams simultaneously on PlayStation's YouTube channel and Twitch; the content is identical on both platforms.

Runtime is confirmed at over 60 minutes. That's enough time for several titles to get substantive coverage rather than a rapid-fire trailer reel, and it means Wolverine is not carrying the whole broadcast.


Video of the Day

What Sony has confirmed about the PlayStation State of Play June 2 2026 lineup

Two things are locked in: the headliner and the general scope. Everything else is undisclosed.

Tim Turi, Content Communications Manager at Sony Interactive Entertainment, said the broadcast will deliver "more than 60 minutes of updates, announcements, and gameplay reveals from top studios around the world," according to IGN. The PlayStation Blog frames the content as "news and announcements for games coming to PS5," with no mention of hardware, PlayStation Plus, or platform-level changes. The confirmed scope is PS5 software, full stop.

Marvel's Wolverine, developed by Insomniac Games, opens the show and launches on PS5 September 15, per the PlayStation Blog. IGN noted that the September 15 release date explains why it leads the broadcast; the game is close enough to launch that a prominent showcase slot makes commercial sense. What that segment actually contains, whether gameplay footage, story material, or a cinematic trailer, hasn't been described beyond "a new look."

No other titles have been named. Sony's phrase "top studios around the world" leaves open the possibility of both first- and third-party content, but the company hasn't specified which studios or titles appear beyond Wolverine. That language is the extent of what's confirmed about the rest of the card.


Advertisement

What the June 2 show is working with: format, precedent, and the open card

A 60-minute-plus runtime with one named title means the majority of the show remains dark. That's not unusual for a State of Play announcement; Sony tends to confirm the format and the headliner, then let the content speak for itself on the day.

The format has a recent precedent. Sony ran a comparable broadcast in February of this year, also over 60 minutes and also featuring content from PlayStation Studios, as IGN reported at the time. The Verge covered that event live. The June 2 show follows the same structural template: a confirmed runtime, a named headliner, and a broader promise of game announcements from across the industry. What differed between the February broadcast and what Sony has said about June 2 is mostly just the headliner and the timing.

The timing is deliberate. The Verge flagged today that Sony is getting a jump on the wider summer gaming event calendar by going early. Scheduling before that window fills up gives the June 2 show a cleaner run at audience attention, though it also means the full lineup lands without much surrounding noise to absorb it. The announced content has to carry the broadcast on its own terms.


Advertisement

Advertisement

What's still unknown, and what to pay attention to

The Wolverine segment is the most scrutinized unknown. Sony called it "a new look," a phrase that could mean anything from a two-minute cinematic to an extended gameplay walkthrough. With September 15 approaching, publishers at this stage in the release cycle typically begin shifting from teasing to showing in earnest, but Sony has not indicated what form this particular reveal will take. The depth of that segment will likely set the tone for how the rest of the show is perceived.

Beyond Wolverine, the question is how the remaining time is distributed. A 60-plus-minute runtime with one confirmed title means roughly an hour of unannounced content. That could mean three or four titles getting meaningful screen time, or it could mean a broader mix of shorter reveals and release date confirmations for previously announced games. Sony's own description, "updates, announcements, and gameplay reveals," covers all of those scenarios. The word "updates" is doing real work there; it implies some of what appears June 2 may already be known to audiences.

The scope of third-party participation is also unresolved. "Top studios around the world" is the only language Sony has used to suggest the show extends beyond its own first-party slate, but no external developer or publisher has been confirmed as part of the broadcast. Whether any named studios or recognizable franchises surface beyond Wolverine is the clearest signal of how loaded the show actually is.

One structural point worth noting: the June 2 broadcast is Sony's second confirmed hour-plus State of Play in 2026. Whether that cadence continues with a comparable showcase later in the year is an open question, though nothing in the current announcement speaks to that either way.


Advertisement

Advertisement

The bottom line before June 2

The State of Play June 2 2026 broadcast starts at 2:00pm PT on YouTube and Twitch, runs over 60 minutes, and opens with Marvel's Wolverine, which launches September 15 on PS5, per the PlayStation Blog. Sony has confirmed PS5 game coverage from studios across the industry but has named no additional titles beyond Wolverine, according to IGN.

The show goes early in a packed June calendar, which gives Sony the floor before the competition arrives. Whether June 2 registers as a Wolverine marketing push or a broader statement about what's coming to PS5 this fall comes down entirely to the unannounced portion of the card, and Sony is keeping that close until the broadcast itself.

Advertisement

Advertisement