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PlayStation License Checks Confirmed, Requires Forced ‘Check Ins’ Online Every 30 Days [UPDATE: Apr 30]

How The Turntables

Philip Watson
PlayStation License Checks Confirmed, Will Require Forced 'Check-Ins' Online Every 30 Days
PlayStation License Checks Confirmed, Will Require Forced 'Check-Ins' Online Every 30 Days - Photo: CGMagazine

This week, it has been revealed by fans that since the March 2026 update, PlayStation 4 and 5 games have required a 30-day DRM online license check for digital games, and today it’s been confirmed as intentional by fans.

For the uninitiated, this week, Sony has faced scrutiny regarding the PlayStation family of consoles, digital licensing and requiring console owners to ‘check in’ online to continue playing games they have purchased. Fans have hit the internet in droves, suggesting they can’t play digital games they own since the March 2026 update unless they connect their PlayStation to the internet and confirm the console’s presence online.

In the beginning, it was only confirmed to happen with PS4 titles, and only with titles purchased after the March 2026 update, but yesterday, YouTube channel Spawn Wave released a video confirming that the licensing test occurs on PS5 titles also. The video presented by the Spawn Wave channel can be seen below.

In the video, the channel tests four games:  Saint Slayer  (purchased digitally on April 27),  Vampire Crawlers  (purchased digitally on April 27),  Crimson Desert  (purchased digitally a month ago), and  Pragmata  (physical title). All four of the titles work as advertised, whether the console is connected to the internet or not; however, things begin to get interesting when the console’s CMOS battery is removed.

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The video explains that this is the component responsible for the console knowing the time and how much has passed on the console. Removing this item from the PlayStation 5 Pro would essentially reset the 30-Day DRM (Digital Rights Management) licensing timer, and after the battery was removed, Saint Slayer and Vampire Crawlers (titles purchased after the March 2026 update) no longer load. The PlayStation 5 Pro gives the user a notice: “Can’t use this content. Can’t connect to the server to verify your license. Wait a while, then try again.” Spawn Wave then connects to the internet, and all four titles work as advertised once again.

Any PlayStation game purchased digitally after March's sytem update will reportedly now require an internet connection once every 30 days to validate the license 🎮

If the console stays offline longer than that, the games will not launch until you reconnect

(via… pic.twitter.com/yN6ZPzEN3L

- Culture Crave 🍿 (@CultureCrave) April 27, 2026

While this confirms there is a kind of DRM on PlayStation preventing players from using games in this 30-day window, Sony has not responded officially to this issue. So, today, fans have taken to social media to confirm their own cases (found by PushSquare ). PlayStation appears to have begun to respond to some users and shed light on the new system in place with the PlayStation Online Assistant, and confirmed that the new licensing restrictions are on purpose.

Some fans have taken these reports as gospel and have used the opportunity to troll PlayStation, as their big E3 campaign from 2013 was all about picking on the Xbox One for implementing a similar DRM with physical titles. Sony said on the screen at one point in the E3 presentation that games will require “no check-ins,” and fans have noticed the irony.

PlayStation License Checks Confirmed, Requires Forced 'Check Ins' Online Every 30 Days
E3 2013

While there is an overwhelming amount of cases on the internet (especially on Reddit ) of fans struggling with this issue, Sony has not issued a formal response yet on the 30-day licensing enforcement. While fans have posted images of PlayStation correspondence showing the DRM is intentional, the new DRM (or glitch, as fans think it could be) enforcement has not been confirmed.

[UPDATE: Apr 30]: Sony Addresses DRM Confusion: “A One-Time Online Check Is Required”

After the DRM licensing issue continued to make the rounds this week, an official SIE spokesperson has released a statement regarding the ongoing confusion about DRM licensing on the PlayStation 4 & 5, and fans can let out a breath of fresh air. In a message to GameSpot , the SIE spokesperson said, “Players can continue to access and play their purchased games as usual. A one-time online check is required to confirm the game’s license, after which no further check-ins are required.”

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So while it appears the new DRM licensing is intentional, Sony has confirmed it is a one-time-only licensing check, and it will stop after a user checks in once, which clears up some of the confusion surrounding the issue.

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