PS5: Haven't you found the console yet? You just needed to dub Deathloop

PS5: Haven't you found the console yet? You just needed to dub Deathloop

PS5

Deathloop was released on PS5 and PC in mid-September. If the game has been praised by the public and critics, it is also true, however, that many probably still have difficulty playing it. This is because the Sony home console is still nowhere to be found (despite the situation is improving compared to the past) and many risk being cut off from the new Arkane Studios experience. This was the same, identical situation that also occurred to the American voice actor of Colt, who found himself unable to play the title he was involved in.

Fortunately, however, everything was resolved for the best . As communicated to Arkane Studios and Bethesda, Jason Kelley has finally managed to grab a PS5. However, there is a rather curious fact about how the Sony home console settled under its television. And it puts at the center of the story a third wheeler, that is Microsoft, which has become the protagonist of a very generous gesture.

The Redmond company in fact owns the entire Zenimax package, which obviously also includes Bethesda and Arkane Studios. And it was Pete Hines, Bethesda's vice president of marketing, who found and shipped a PS5 to Jason Kelley. So, in some way, it can be said that it was Microsoft that helped Kelley to finally be able to enjoy Deathloop.

Obviously following this great surprise Kelley thanked all those who took steps to allow him to receive the PS5 with which to finally be able to play Deathloop. It is however curious how in reality even those who take an active part in the production of a game cannot, these days, be able to have the opportunity to get their hands on the final product. We sincerely hope that this decidedly paradoxical situation will resolve you as soon as possible.

Deathloop with metallic homage poster is available HERE.







A funeral somehow led to a CD getting stuck in my PS5 disk drive

Due to unforeseen events, I’ve come to learn that not only does the PS5 not support CD-R discs, but those CD-R discs may also get stuck in your PS5 disc drive. So, PS5 owners, avoid inserting CD-R discs into your PS5 because I promise you’d want to do your best to avoid sending your console into PlayStation Support.


This dilemma started two weeks ago. I had a big family event coming (a funeral, to be precise), and my family wanted me to sort out the music. Because I consider myself to be something of a music connoisseur, I vowed to myself that I was going to make at least 90% of the attendees cry during the funeral service, and Mariah Carey’s One Sweet Day, and Yolanda Adams’ Open My Heart was going to help me do that.


But, there was a problem; the church where the funeral was going to take place only had a CD player for playing music, so I found myself having to burn a CD in 2021.

Testing it out

With the tear-jerking Mariah Carey and Yolanda Adams songs burnt on a blank CD-R disc using an old laptop of mine from 2010, I now needed to check if the songs were successfully burnt on the CD... but I didn’t have a CD player to hand.


Maybe it was because I remembered the PS3 being the ultimate media center, but I thought my PS5 was going to be able to read CD-R discs, so I stupidly inserted the CD-R disc into my PS5 and… it got stuck.


The PS5 didn’t read the disc, and every time I pressed the eject button an ugly rattling sound came from the console. Now panicking, I immediately went onto the PlayStation support site and found you could manually eject discs by taking the side panels off the PS5 and using some screwdriver wizardry. However, that didn’t work either. So, I had no other option but to send my PS5 off for repair.

Businessman pinching temples holding his glasses

(Image credit: Shutterstock / Elnur)PlayStation Support woes

April this year was the first time I’ve had to use PlayStation Support, as my DualSense controller had the all-too-common stick drift issue and needed to be sent in for repair.


I was worried about sending the DualSense for repair due to the slew of negative comments about PlayStation support on Reddit, but thankfully, I was mostly satisfied with the service. PlayStation Support only took two weeks to get my controller back to me, hence I thought sending my PS5 off to the repair center should be a relatively easy process… but it wasn’t.


After a bit of conflicting information about if my PS5 was actually received by the repair center- it was- after about two weeks I finally got my PS5 back. PlayStation Support had successfully got the CD-R disc out of the disc drive and everything was fine, until I tried to insert Deathloop (I’ve been dying to play it for the past week now), only to find that the PS5 simply refused to accept the disc.


So, after ejecting the stuck CD-R disc from the disc drive, no disc could be inserted at all. PlayStation Support, somehow, may not have tested the disc drive before sending the PS5 back out to me, which is kind of ludicrous. Now I’m stuck here with a PS5 that will not take discs, and in hindsight maybe I should’ve bought Deathloop digitally on the PS Store.


Currently, I still haven’t got any definitive word from PlayStation Support on whether I’d need to send back my PS5 to get repaired again.


But, on a good note, my music selection for the funeral was a success, so my thanks goes out to Mariah Carey and Yolanda Adams for making my family tear up.


On the other hand, I’m about to cry myself, looking at all the PS5 games I can’t currently play, which is partly PlayStation Support’s fault, but largely my own fault for thinking my new PS5 could play CD-R discs.