PlayStation Wrap Up 2025 reveals your annual gaming statistics

Discover your gaming stats, hours spent, and top achievements in a personalized summary of your year on PlayStation.

PlayStation Wrap Up 2025: A detailed analysis of your gaming year

If you have dedicated part of 2025 to exploring virtual worlds from your PlayStation console, the platform invites you to carry out an exhaustive review of your activity. The PlayStation 2025 Wrap Up, analogous to the well-known annual summaries of services like Spotify, offers an analytical and personalized view of your behavior as a player, transforming raw data into a narrative of your year in video games.

This retrospective tool, available from launch until January 8, compiles and presents key metrics of your interaction with the PlayStation ecosystem. It is crucial to understand that the report will be dynamically updated until the end of the calendar year, thus integrating the game sessions from the last days of December to offer a definitive and complete overview.

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Requirements and access to your personalized game report

In order to generate and consult this interactive annual summary, it is necessary to meet certain technical and permissions criteria. First of all, access is enabled for PlayStation 4 and PlayStation 5 users who have accumulated a minimum of 10 hours of gameplay between January 1 and December 31, 2025. Additionally, you must be over 18 years of age and have previously given consent for the use of “full data” in the account privacy settings from PlayStation Network (PSN).

The inquiry process is straightforward: players must head to the official website wrapup.playstation.com and log in with their PSN account credentials. After authentication, the system generates a visual and interactive report that details the year’s gaming experience.

Metrics and insights included in the report

The Wrap Up displays a set of valuable data for the analysis of gaming habits. Users can examine their unlocked achievements and trophies, identify the most-watched titles and genres, and see the distribution of total play time between single-player experiences and multiplayer modes. The platform enriches this analysis with a personalized playlist in the PlayStation Plus music service, creating a soundtrack for your gaming year.

The report also delves into the peripheral gaming experience, quantifying the use of specialized hardware such as the PlayStation VR2 virtual reality headset, the PlayStation Portal remote gaming device, and revealing the custom design of your most used DualSense controller. This layer of information provides richer context for how you interact with the ecosystem beyond the main console.

As an incentive for reviewing the summary, players receive an exclusive digital reward: a crystal-themed avatar. In addition, a summary graphic card is generated that synthesizes key statistics in a visually attractive format, designed specifically to be downloaded and shared in communities and social networks, allowing users to showcase their passion and digital milestones.

Share your PlayStation Wrap Up 2025 summary card on your social networks and challenge your friends to compare their stats. Explore more analysis and news about the PlayStation ecosystem in our technology and video games section.

AI becomes a dating coach, but divides opinions

Users turn to chatbots to start romantic conversations, but doubts persist about authenticity.

The role of AI in modern romance

Marie Lansley recently arrived in San Francisco and, while looking for a partner, decided to try artificial intelligence. “I’ve tried everything,” says the 36-year-old engineer, who consults chatbots like ChatGPT and Claude to help her start conversations on dating apps. “I’m open to AI finding the love of my life, but I’m not totally convinced,” she says. “Chemistry is always going to be analog.”

More and more people are using chatbots to compose messages or interpret responses. Dating coach Carey Gaynes compares him to Cyrano de Bergerac: “You’re using a voice that’s not your own.” He worries about overdependence, although he recognizes that it can be useful.

Mason Naung, a 25-year-old student in Los Angeles, only turns to AI to break the initial ice. “If the messages go further, it would be a small warning sign,” he says. San Diego businesswoman Dani Cohen prefers an AI-written farewell message to being ghosted. “Anything that gets people to communicate in a friendly way is great,” he says.

Other voices are more critical. Clara Sullivan, a 22-year-old student, would not respond to a profile that uses AI. “It’s scary how dependent people are. It’s taken away the ability to think creatively,” he says. A Pew Research Center survey reveals that 53% of US adults believe AI will worsen creativity, and half think it will affect meaningful relationships.

Dating apps already integrate AI. Tinder has Chemistry, Hinge uses AI launchers, and Bumble plans to eliminate swipe to prioritize automated matching. Its CEO, Whitney Wolfe Herd, says that technology “should make love feel more human, not less.”

Mohammed Nizami, 23, does not use AI for dating. “We all crave authentic connection. If there’s a filter, it’s not a good way to start,” he says. Jake Clay, a content creator in New York, calls the situation a “vicious cycle” that bypasses sacred processes of life. “It’s sad to delegate something so fundamental to an AI that doesn’t understand emotions,” he laments.

Despite reservations, the merger between AI and dating seems inevitable. Efficiency gains ground, but authenticity remains the challenge.

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NASA takes the 2026 World Cup ball into space and plays it on the ISS

NASA sent an official 2026 World Cup ball into space and opened an exhibition in Houston.

World Cup ball arrives at the International Space Station

The fever of the 2026 World Cup permeated the atmosphere. NASA sent an official World Cup ball to the International Space Station (ISS). In a video shared on social networks, four astronauts are seen playing with the ball in microgravity. The message: “We work to inspire the next generation by showing how space exploration drives innovation in sports science.”

The agency seeks to disseminate how research on the ISS generates advances in science, technology and human health. Benefits that even reach the soccer field.

Exhibition at the FIFA Fan Fest in Houston

NASA set up an exhibit at the FIFA Fan Fest in Houston, Texas. It opened on June 11 at the start of the World Cup and will be available until July 19. Visitors can discover how space research improves life on Earth and learn about the Artemis program missions.

The exhibition explains how more than 25 years of studies on the ISS have helped understand the aerodynamics of the ball. According to a statement from the Johnson Space Center, previous research analyzed how internal mass, sensors and seam texture affect stability and rotation under real-play conditions.

Science applied to sports

As part of the project, NASA and Adidas present the “STEMonstration” demo. They compare how balls spin with different balance in microgravity. The objective: to show that space discoveries benefit athletes and fans of the most popular sport in the world.

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Users report massive drop in X this Monday

Users report problems accessing social network X this Monday, June 22.

Cuts in X during Monday

Users of the social network X, formerly Twitter, reported this Monday, June 22, difficulties accessing and browsing the platform. According to data from DownDetector, a site that monitors digital failures, 1,131 people have reported problems with the application, loading the main feed and connecting to servers.

The most common issues include the inability to refresh the home page, errors when displaying posts, and crashes when using basic functions. When trying to log in, some see messages like “Something went wrong. Try loading again,” without the platform recovering.

So far, X has not issued an official statement on the origin of the failures or the estimated time to restore service.

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