Sony’s FlexStrike wireless fight stick will launch globally on August 6, 2026, priced at $199.99 in the United States, with pre-orders opening June 12. It is PlayStation’s first in-house arcade stick, built for the PS5 and PC, and it arrives on the same day as the new fighting game Marvel Tōkon: Fighting Souls.
That timing is the easy part of the story. The harder part is what the launch means for a peripheral category Sony has handed to outside brands for two console generations. For years, anyone who wanted a tournament stick on PlayStation bought from Hori, Razer or Qanba. Now the platform owner is selling its own, and it is the only one in the aisle that cuts the cable.
Sony Puts a Price and Date on Its First Wireless Fight Stick
The accessory first surfaced in June 2025 under the codename Project Defiant, shown off during a State of Play broadcast as PlayStation’s first wireless arcade stick. Sony confirmed the FlexStrike name in late July that year, then went quiet for months. The June 1 update finally pinned down the calendar and the cost.
Pricing is consistent across the major regions, with local tax baked in. Pre-orders run through PlayStation Direct and participating retailers, with the hardware shipping roughly eight weeks later.
- United States: $199.99
- Europe: €199.99
- United Kingdom: £179.99
- Japan: ¥34,980
Sony says portability drove the design. The stick ships with a built-in rechargeable battery and a sling carry case sized to hold it, the pitch being that you can grab it for a tournament, a local meetup or a friend’s couch without untangling anything. You can read the full rundown in PlayStation’s official accessories launch update.
PlayStation Link Is the Part Competitors Cannot Copy
The headline feature is the one no rival can match on PS5. FlexStrike connects over PlayStation Link, Sony’s proprietary low-latency wireless protocol that also powers the Pulse Explore earbuds and Pulse Elite headset, and it ships with a PS Link USB adapter for PC. Hands-on previews from the spring put the wireless latency at roughly 4ms and the battery at about 40 hours per charge, with a wired USB-C option for players who still distrust anything cordless.
Underneath the wireless trick, the rest of the build reads like a checklist aimed squarely at the existing tournament crowd, drawn from the original Project Defiant reveal.
- A custom digital lever stick designed in-house by Sony
- Toolless interchangeable restrictor gates in square, circle and octagon shapes, with onboard storage for the spares
- Face buttons using mechanical switches
- A touch pad like the one on the DualSense controller, so menu and system inputs work without reaching for a pad
How FlexStrike Stacks Up Against Hori and Razer
The category Sony is walking into is small but fiercely brand-loyal, and every serious option in it plugs into a wall. Hori’s Fighting Stick Alpha, an officially licensed PS5 board, uses the company’s Hayabusa lever and a 10-foot cable. Razer went the other way with the Kitsune, an all-button leverless controller built on optical switches. Both are wired, and both cost more than the FlexStrike’s listed price.
| Product | Connection | Input style | Listed price | PS5 / PC |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sony FlexStrike | Wireless (PlayStation Link) plus wired USB-C | Lever stick, swappable gates | €199.99 | Yes / Yes |
| Hori Fighting Stick Alpha | Wired USB | Hayabusa lever stick | around €239.90 | Yes / Yes |
| Razer Kitsune | Wired USB-C | All-button leverless | around €289 | Yes / Yes |
The cord is the crack in the incumbents’ moat. A licensed PS5 stick that goes wireless with near-wired response, and undercuts the field on price, is a genuinely new proposition. Razer’s all-button Kitsune arcade controller leads on the leverless layout that top players increasingly favor, but it still tethers to the console.
Why August 6 Matters: Marvel Tōkon Sets the Stage
Hardware like this lives or dies on having a reason to buy it, and Sony built one into the release date. Marvel Tōkon: Fighting Souls ships the same day, August 6, on PS5 and PC. It is a 4v4 tag fighter from Arc System Works, the studio behind Guilty Gear and Dragon Ball FighterZ, made in collaboration with PlayStation Studios and Marvel Games.
The game launches with a 20-character base roster that includes Captain America, Iron Man, Spider-Man and several X-Men, and matches build from a single fighter and an assist toward a full four-on-four lineup. Arc System Works producer Takeshi Yamanaka has said the team plans to support the title for a decade.
That is the kind of tentpole a peripheral team waits for. A high-profile Marvel fighter with a long support runway gives lapsed and new players a fresh reason to consider a dedicated stick, and Sony wants its own hardware in their hands on day one rather than a competitor’s. The full lineup sits on the Marvel Tōkon: Fighting Souls roster page.
Releasing the stick into a quiet week would have meant fighting for attention with nothing to play. Releasing it into the launch of one of the year’s biggest fighters means the marketing does some of the work for free.
A Stick Built for Gamepad Players, Not Just the Pros
Here is where the bet gets interesting, and where it carries some risk. Sony has been open that FlexStrike is aimed less at hardened arcade veterans and more at the millions of players who grew up holding a DualSense. The simplified layout and approachable feel are deliberate.
We think it’s an experience that those people who have grown up with the DualSense deserve to give a shot.
That framing came from Edwin Foo, a vice president at Sony Interactive Entertainment, in a spring hands-on preview. It tells you who Sony thinks the buyer is. The company is not trying to convert the pro who already owns three sticks; it is trying to grow the pool of people who own one at all.
The risk sits in the choice of a lever. Competitive fighting has drifted hard toward leverless all-button controllers, the format Razer chose, because they allow faster, cleaner directional inputs. By leading with a traditional joystick, Sony is courting the newcomer and the nostalgist while leaving the cutting-edge tournament player to look elsewhere. Whether the wireless convenience and the Marvel tie-in pull enough first-time buyers to offset that is the open question the sales figures will answer.
The Fight Stick Is One Piece of a Bigger Accessory Push
FlexStrike did not arrive alone. The same announcement laid out a small wave of first-party PS5 gear, a sign that Sony wants more of the accessory wallet that has long flowed to outside brands.
- FlexStrike wireless fight stick: $199.99 in the US, pre-orders June 12, launch August 6
- 27-inch gaming monitor with DualSense charging hook: $349.99 in the US and ¥49,980 in Japan, a 2560×1440 QHD IPS panel with variable refresh rate that runs up to 120Hz on PS5 and PS5 Pro and up to 240Hz on compatible PCs and Macs; pre-orders open June 5, launch August 27 in the US and Japan
- Pulse Elevate wireless speakers: confirmed for later in 2026, with pricing and a date still to come
Taken together, the three products show Sony filling out a desk-and-living-room hardware line around the PS5 rather than chasing one niche. The fight stick is the eye-catching piece, but the monitor is the volume play and the speakers round out the set. If the FlexStrike sells through its first run alongside Marvel Tōkon, expect Sony to treat the fight stick aisle as its own for the rest of the generation. If it stalls, the wireless experiment becomes a one-off and the third parties keep the floor.
Frequently Asked Questions
When does the Sony FlexStrike fight stick release?
The FlexStrike launches globally on August 6, 2026, the same day as Marvel Tōkon: Fighting Souls. Pre-orders open earlier, on June 12, through PlayStation Direct and participating retailers.
How much does the FlexStrike cost?
It carries a recommended price of $199.99 in the United States, €199.99 in Europe, £179.99 in the United Kingdom and ¥34,980 in Japan, with local tax included.
Does the FlexStrike work on PC?
Yes. It is built for both PS5 and PC and includes a PS Link USB adapter for wireless play, plus a wired USB-C option. PlayStation has noted that PC compatibility rolls out around launch.
What makes the FlexStrike different from other fight sticks?
It is PlayStation’s first in-house wireless arcade stick, connecting over the low-latency PlayStation Link protocol while rivals from Hori and Razer remain wired. It also ships with a rechargeable battery, a sling carry case and toolless swappable restrictor gates.
What else did Sony announce alongside the FlexStrike?
Sony confirmed a 27-inch QHD gaming monitor with a DualSense charging hook at $349.99, launching August 27 in the US and Japan with pre-orders from June 5, plus the Pulse Elevate wireless speakers due later in 2026.
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