Skip to main content

PlayStation 4 media remote coming this year from PDP

ps4 media remote announced header
As the PlayStation 4 gears up for its third year on the market, Sony’s console is finally getting an officially licensed media remote from accessory manufacturer PDP.

PDP’s remote allows users to access all PlayStation 4 interface functionality. The remote can also control connected set top boxes, HDTVs, and audio receivers.

Recommended Videos

The PDP Universal Media Remote includes many of the buttons and features offered by traditional TV remotes, and additionally can control console functions accessed via the PlayStation 4’s square, circle, triangle, and X buttons. The remote also includes the DualShock 4 controller’s Home, Options, and Share buttons, allowing for quick and easy screen sharing via Twitch and other streaming services.

Buttons on PDP’s Universal Media Remote also trigger device-specific menu and guide screens. Other features include programmable buttons, keys that enable control of up to four connected devices, and an eject button for the PS4’s disc drive.

It took almost two years for the PlayStation 4 to receive an officially licensed remote peripheral after its 2013 launch, and the PS3 received a similar accessory in 2011. Microsoft’s competing Xbox One console also has its own media remote that features backlit keys and a comparatively pared-down approach to media browsing.

Several PlayStation 4 entertainment applications are compatible with the PDP Universal Media Remote, including film and TV streaming services like Netflix, Hulu Plus, Amazon Instant Video, and HBO GO. The remote also supports sports apps like MLB.TV, NBA Game Time, NHL GameCenter Live, and the WWE Network.

Sony has launched its own array of video and music streaming services for the PlayStation 4, giving users the ability to purchase and rent feature films directly from the console’s PlayStation Store. Sony recently expanded its PlayStation Music catalog via a partnership with Spotify, allowing players to listen to streaming music during gameplay via a free ad-supported login or with an ad-free subscription.

The PDP Universal Media Remote for PlayStation 4 is priced at $30, and is available for pre-order from Amazon and GameStop. The remote will hit retail in North America on October 31.

Danny Cowan
Danny’s passion for video games was ignited upon his first encounter with Nintendo’s Duck Hunt, and years later, he still…
I miss the golden age of oddball, first-party PlayStation exclusives
gamescom 2012 ps vita announcements playstation tearaway media molecule

While PlayStation continues to thrive thanks to big-budget games like God of War Ragnarok, two recent events show how much Sony's video game brand is changing. The first came when the Sony-owned studio Media Molecule would end support for Dreams, a PS4-exclusive experience creation tool allowing players to build and share games with one another, later this year.

Shortly after that news, PixelOpus -- another Sony-owned studio -- announced it would be shutting down on June 2 after publishing just two titles: Entrwined in 2014 and Concrete Genie in 2019. In its tweet, PixelOpus stated "Dear friends, our PixelOpus adventure has come to an end. As we look to new futures, we wanted to say a heartfelt thank you to the millions of passionate players who have supported us, and our mission to make beautiful, imaginative games with heart. We are so grateful!"

Read more
3 big things I need to see from the next PlayStation Showcase
Peter and Miles from Marvel's Spider-Man 2.

It’s that time of the year again when industry insiders are teasing that a big PlayStation Showcase will happen around June. A third-party focused State of Play happened in 2022, but now Video Games Chronicle’s Andy Robinson and Giant Bomb’s Jeff Grubb are both suggesting that a more first-party oriented "Showcase" could be on the way sometime during the next month, potentially during the week of May 25.
PlayStation has had a rough start to 2023, with console exclusive Forspoken garnering mixed reviews, the PlayStation VR2 impressing critics while underperforming in sales, and The Last of Us Part 1’s PC port being broken at launch. With only Marvel’s Spider-Man 2 confirmed to be on the horizon for 2023, Sony has a lot to prove during its next showcase. There are three specific things I need to see from Sony if that PlayStation Showcase does come to fruition.
Give PSVR2 purpose
The PlayStation VR2 is an impressive piece of virtual reality technology, but it lacks killer apps outside of Horizon: Call of the Mountain. New game releases for the headset have been slow since its February 2022 launch, which is likely why the $550 headset has underperformed. Sony has opted to mainly relegate PSVR2 to State of Plays or PlayStation Blog posts, but it needs to revitalize excitement for the platform by giving some of its games a spotlight in a big PlayStation Showcase.

Hopefully, there’s more on the way in terms of new AAA VR exclusives from first-party studios, as well as much-demanded ports like Half-Life: Alyx. Already announced PSVR2 games like Journey to Foundation and Synapse could also use release dates. A PlayStation Showcase is the perfect time for Sony to put out a clear road map for PSVR2’s future game library, just as the September 2021 PlayStation did for PS5. Give me a reason to strap on that headset yet again.
Flesh out the system’s 2023 exclusives lineup
PS5 needs a strong lineup for this fall as well. With the exception of Marvel’s Spider-Man 2, things look pretty barren for PS5 this year after the launch of Final Fantasy XVI. Several previously announced PS5 games still lack concrete release dates and could arrive in the second half of this year. It’d be nice to get a clearer picture of Sony’s PS5 game lineup for the rest of the year; hopefully, it includes titles like Stellar Blade, the Silent Hill 2 remake, Lost Soul Aside, Death Stranding 2, and Final Fantasy VII Rebirth.

Read more
Dreams live support is ending — and that’s a big misstep for PlayStation
Art fights a giant bird in Dreams.

Sony could’ve had its own popular proprietary game engine and metaverse. Instead, it just let it slip through its fingers.

Media Molecule is ending live support for Dreams, its highly ambitious game-creating and playing tool for PS4, on September 1. Its servers are staying online for now -- and it has a few more content updates in the pipeline before then -- but after August, there will be no new tools, ports, or events for Dreams. That means it’s not coming to PS5, PlayStation VR2, and, most critically, PC.

Read more