You may have missed it, but bucked trends by coming to PlayStation 5 - albeit four years after its initial launch.

Lots of PS5-owning gearheads are likely thrilled to have Forza finally available on their preferred home console, and justifiably so. Despite the lack of a physical edition, Forza Horizon 5 looks, feels and plays great on the PS5. More important than the game's actual quality, though, is how it's performed on the PlayStation Store, and the precedent that sets for future (possible formerly) Microsoft exclusives.

Forza Horizon 5 Topped PSN’s May 2025 Charts

Forza Is Selling Well On PS5

Forza Horizon 5 with the ps5 console
Custom image by Katarina Cimbaljevic

According to the official Forza has dominated the EU charts, and it's not alone at the top.

Related
Call Of Duty Is Still Xbox Game 's Biggest Problem In 2025

Despite a fantastic 2025 for Game , it's still missing one crucial element: Call of Duty games. The Xbox Games Showcase needs to fix this.

3

In fact, several Microsoft-owned games have quickly become bestsellers on the PSN store, especially in the last few months. In third place this month stateside (second place in the EU) is Clair Obscur: Expedition 33, with DOOM: The Dark Ages right behind. Oblivion Remastered was a chart-topper in the US last month, and Minecraft is a mainstay on PlayStation's monthly list of best-selling games.

Many of these games were also day-one releases on Game .

Perhaps it shouldn't come as too much of a surprise - these games are all popular, and got at least decent, if not excellent, reviews. They were bound to be bestsellers either way. Still, there was a time (and not so long ago, either) when games like these would've been Microsoft exclusives, coming out only on PC and Xbox consoles. Now, though, the tide of console exclusivity is changing.

Microsoft Games Are A Big Part Of PlayStation Now

Cross-Console Releases Are More Common

The industry's now at a point where Microsoft's games make up a big part of the PlayStation library. There are a few potential reasons for this, but certainly a major factor is the simple truth that Microsoft owns a large share of the game development industry today. From big-name studios like Bethesda and Activision Blizzard to debut devs like Sandfall Interactive, many game studios fall under Microsoft's umbrella. Although this was somewhat unthinkable a few years ago, Microsoft has kept releasing these games on the PlayStation line instead of making them exclusives. The more they sell, the more Microsoft makes.

Related
I'm Convinced This PlayStation Game Was The Most Shocking Reveal In Over 10 Years

PlayStation had a phenomenal State of Play recently, but one game reveal was truly unbelievable. It's time for the GOAT stealth series to return.

In general, Microsoft seems to be moving away from the hardware market, and towards game distribution. Compared to the PS5 and the Switch, the Xbox Series X/S has undersold this console generation. Microsoft has a much smaller share of the market when it comes to console sales alone, and it seems to be leaning into that. Now, you don't even need an Xbox to play Game - cloud streaming lets you play on your phone, your PC, your smart TV, or your handheld. Meanwhile, new Game releases keep stacking up.

While we can't predict Microsoft's future, it certainly seems to be distancing itself from the competition with Sony, focusing instead on putting out a solid library of games on various platforms. PlayStation, meanwhile, has had a much slower pace of game releases. Although Sony's studios have had a couple of hits this generation (Helldivers 2 and Astro Bot, perhaps most notably), overall, they haven't put out quite as many games as Microsoft's.

Now more than ever, the volume and diversity of the PlayStation library is dependent on its third-party developers.

Now more than ever, the volume and diversity of the PlayStation library is dependent on its third-party developers. And, strangely enough, Microsoft now numbers among them. And evidently, the fans like it - Microsoft's games have consistently sold well when they come to the PS5. That could signal a major change to the industry in the very near future.

What The PS5 Library Could Look Like Going Forward

Xbox And PS5 Could Work Together

Xbox logo next to a PS5
Custom image by Katarina Cimbaljevic

Again, I can't predict the future, but I wouldn't be too surprised if Microsoft decided to skip the next console generation, or to lean on its rumored handheld and cloud streaming services, all the while picking up lots of new games to distribute. We're at a point now where there's scarcely any hardware difference between consoles, at least in of capability; what really determines most players' preferences is the library of exclusives on either platform. And with Xbox moving away from exclusivity while PlayStation continues to embrace it, you really get the best of both worlds with a PS5.

So really, in the next generation, Xbox exclusivity could become a thing of the past. I could see Sony and Microsoft working together to put out a solid, diverse library of games as a t effort, releasing their games on a variety of different platforms. With the Switch 2's stronger hardware now in play, PlayStation and Xbox games could even go Nintendo's way. Lots of former PlayStation exclusives and day-one Game releases are already confirmed for the Switch 2, including Yakuza 0 and Kunitsu-Gami.

Related
Preparing For GTA 6? I'm Convinced Xbox Is The Best Platform For It

GTA 6 is bound to be the game of the generation, and there's still time to play all Rockstar games prior. Xbox has to be the best place for it.

3

To some extent, this is just my pie-in-the-sky dream. I've always thought console exclusivity was a little silly; it's an outdated relic of the past that we should've left behind us last generation. It causes good games to underperform, and forces players to choose arbitrarily between two pieces of hardware with roughly the same capabilities.

So, you might think that Microsoft's games topping PlayStation's charts signals the end of an era, and to some extent it is. Sony's not really the game-producing powerhouse it once was, but that's okay: when it does put out games, they tend to do well, and Microsoft has the rest covered. Hopefully, Forza Horizon 5's excellent performance on the PlayStation signals that we're at the start of a new era, where console exclusivity is a thing of the past.

Source: PlayStation Blog

Forza Horizon 5
Publisher
Xbox Game Studios
Genre
Racing
Mode
Single-player, multiplayer
Platform
Xbox Series X, Xbox One
Rating
E