PS Now vs Xbox Game Pass: which game subscription service will get your hard-earned cash? We’re juggling all sorts of subscription services nowadays: Netflix, Amazon Prime, Disney Plus, and Spotify are all competing for your cash, but this is increasingly becoming the case for games, too.

It’s worth remembering that neither platform properly equates to a Netflix-style model but, bearing Microsoft’s commitment to Xbox Game Pass and the huge number of games available on PlayStation Now in mind, both are worth your consideration as an innovative way to try lots of games without spending all of your savings. 

If you can’t justify owning both, it’s worth knowing the differences between Xbox Game Pass and PlayStation Now. So we’ll be going into what each service is, how much it costs, and the strength of their respective game libraries.

Xbox Game Pass vs PS Now overview

ps now vs xbox game pass

(Image credit: Sony)

Both Game Pass and PS Now are game subscription services that, in exchange for a flat monthly fee, give you access to a library to hundreds of games. However, you only own these games as long as your subscription is active. 

PS Now allows you to stream the 800+ games in its library and gives you the option to download them to your PC or PS4 hard drive. Following Sony’s acquisition of cloud gaming company Gaikai in 2012 for $380 million, PS Now members can play titles on a remote server, if their internet speeds are strong enough. 

Sony recommends at least 5 mbps, but 10+ will be better for interruption-free gameplay, and that can go higher for the most graphically intensive experiences. However, while this saves on hard drive space, irritating mid-game disconnections are a possibility. In any case, an Ethernet connection is always preferable to wi-fi for the best quality stream.

However, PS Now is available on PS4 and PC, making the platform the only way mouse and keyboard loyalists can play Sony exclusives like Bloodborne, The Last of Us, and Uncharted.

Game Pass also has the capacity for subscribers to download games to their PC or Xbox One, which requires HDD or SDD drive space, and the time to download them. There’s no limit on your number of game downloads and you have access to them offline for up to 30 days. 

Catching up with PS Now’s streaming offering, Microsoft’s Project xCloud gaming platform will launch on September 15, giving Game Pass Ultimate subscribers the ability to stream over 100 titles from the Game Pass library to their Android phone or tablet (iOS will not be available at launch). Mobile cloud gaming will make Game Pass stand apart from PS Now which doesn’t offer this.

Support will be available in 22 countries at launch including Austria, Belgium, Canada, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, Spain, South Korea, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Project xCloud does depend on a stable internet connection, but Microsoft has promised it can run at 7-10mb/s.

When you access cloud gaming on your Android device, all your progress from console will transfer over. So you can jump from playing Gears 5 on your Xbox One X to playing on your phone – and you can still play online multiplayer with friends. Basically, it should offer pretty much the same experience as on your on your console, but only a mobile device.

PS Now vs Xbox Game Pass price

Xbox Game Pass vs PlayStation Now

(Image credit: Microsoft)

PlayStation Now can be purchased for longer time periods at increasingly better value – however the service currently isn’t available in Australia.

One month of PS Now costs $9.99 / £8.99 – recently cut from $19.99 to match the price of a month of Game Pass in the US – and three months is $24.99 / £22.99, and a year is $59.99 / £49.99. 12 months of PS Now bought at once works out at just under $5 a month. There’s also a 7-day free trial that can be cancelled at any time, so it’s worth quitting for a month if you find yourself with less time to play.

It should be noted, though that there’s no bundle that adds in PlayStation Plus, so you’ve still got to pay $9.99 / £6.99 a month for online play.

Xbox Game Pass costs $9.99 / £7.99 / AU$10.95 per month on console, with access to the PC beta costing $4.99 / £3.99 / AU$4.98 per month or $14.99 / £11.99 / AU$14.95 per quarter.

Then there’s Xbox Game Pass Ultimate, which is more expensive at $14.99 / £10.99 / AU$15.95 a month, but with it you get Game Pass, Xbox Live Gold, Game Pass for PC and, when it’s launched, Project xCloud cloud gaming. Bought separately this works out as $30 (£23) – ideal for owners of both a PC and Xbox One and offering a good value bundle. 

At time of writing, Microsoft is offering the first month of Game Pass for $1 / £1 / AU$1.

Xbox Game Pass vs PS Now games

playstation now vs xbox game pass

(Image credit: Sony)

Xbox Game Pass rocketed in popularity in 2019 with some serious triple-A scalps. Highly anticipated games like The Outer Worlds launched day one on the platform, along with Microsoft first-party exclusives like Gears 5. Expect upcoming exclusives like Halo: Infinite and Fable 4 to also arrive on launch.

There are usually around 200 Game Pass titles available at once – and a smaller 150-strong collection on Game Pass for PC – with games coming and going every month and offering a nice mix of Xbox One and Xbox 360. Keep an eye on your console’s Game Pass tab to see which games are leaving. You can also buy and keep Game Pass games for a 20% reduction and a 10% discount for associated DLC.  

There are more games on PS Now, but it’s arguably quantity over quality. New titles from the PS2, PS3, and PS4 generations are added to its 800+ game library each month and they include heavy hitters like Red Dead Redemption 2 as well as Sony exclusives The Last of Us and Horizon: Zero Dawn. But unlike Game Pass, these first-party titles tend not to appear on day one. That said, it’s a great way of replaying older games without booting up an older console.

Xbox Game Pass vs PS Now verdict

At the moment in 2020, Xbox Game Pass is the stronger service, but PS Now isn’t desperately far behind. The key factor that swings in favour of Microsoft’s platform is the quality of its library, how quickly its first-party games arrive and how clear it is that Microsoft is committed to making Game Pass a big success.

But PS Now has been improving. Sony has expanded its library with stronger titles, cut the price, and introduced downloads to complement its streaming options. If it can balance out its collection of older titles with some of the most up-to-date first and third-party offerings it’ll do even better. 

Either way, Sony and Microsoft will surely be investing heavily in both their subscription offerings. The green team will aim to capitalise on their recent success and Sony will likely start launching their games on PS Now at launch, if they hope to catch up. With Google and even Amazon looking to claim their own slice of the video game pie, the winner of the subscription battleground may well decide the next-gen console war.

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