According to online chatter, you’d be mistaken to think that Sony will soon let PlayStation users buy games using a Sony-issued cryptocurrency. However, the crypto community may be getting ahead of itself.
On July 2, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency granted preliminary conditional approval for a proposed Sony Bank-owned trust bank called Connectia Trust. Neither that decision nor Sony Bank’s announcement names PlayStation, the PlayStation Store, or game purchases.
The approval simply outlines a financial-services structure that could support payments on Sony properties in the future, but a PlayStation product is not part of the public record.

What Sony has proposed
Connectia Trust would be wholly owned by Sony Bank. The OCC decision says the proposed trust would issue a dollar-backed stablecoin, maintain reserves, provide custody and support transfers in a restricted, permissioned closed-loop network.
Its customers would include U.S. retail customers who already have relationships with Sony Group or its subsidiaries, as well as Sony Group companies.
That framework could be useful for a consumer platform. It describes a payment system confined to approved Sony properties and defined customers, not an open cryptocurrency that can be spent broadly across the internet.
Still, the filing uses general terms. It does not identify which consumer services would join the network or say that games could be bought with the token.
Viral social media posts are making the leap many readers would make upon first seeing a Sony stablecoin plan: PlayStation is the company’s best-known consumer platform, so a Sony-controlled payment rail can seem like a route to game purchases. Reactions also focused on the prospect of a tightly controlled closed ecosystem. Obviously, mere online speculation does not make it a Sony product announcement.
Connectia also has not cleared its main regulatory hurdle. The OCC’s action was preliminary conditional approval, and the trust cannot begin business until it meets pre-opening requirements and receives final approval. Sony Bank says it is preparing for a possible 2027 opening, subject to required approvals, and explicitly states that neither the opening date nor stablecoin issuance is guaranteed.
A PlayStation feature would require another decision after that. The proposed network is limited to Sony Group and subsidiary platforms, but the filing does not commit any named product to use it.
Sony would need to specify the product, its eligible customers, and what they could buy before a PlayStation purchase flow could exist.
In October 2025, Sony completed a partial spin-off of its financial-services business and retained a 16.40% stake in Sony Financial Group, rather than keeping it as a consolidated subsidiary, according to Sony’s corporate record.
That does not prevent coordination, but it makes the trust-bank approval only one element of a potential PlayStation-payment plan.
Sony Bank now has a conditional route to build a U.S. stablecoin and custody operation for a restricted Sony network. It has not announced PlayStation crypto payments.



