Sony has pulled back the curtain on three new PlayStation accessories, headlined by FlexStrike, a wireless fight stick for PS5 and PC, plus a 27-inch gaming monitor with a built-in hook for charging a DualSense controller. The company also teased wireless Pulse Elevate speakers, although those are still missing a firm launch date. The timing is no accident: these are the kind of premium add-ons Sony likes to line up around a big software moment, and they are coming with clear pricing rather than the usual vague ”coming soon” routine.
FlexStrike is the more interesting of the pair. It launches globally on 6 August 2026, the same date as Marvel Tokon: Fighting Souls, which makes the controller feel less like a random accessory and more like a launch-day companion for fighting-game fans. Sony is asking $200 for it, with pre-orders opening on 12 June 2026, and the bundle includes a carrying case along with a built-in battery.
FlexStrike price, pre-orders and PC support
There is one asterisk: full PC support will not be available at launch. Sony says that functionality will arrive later through a staged software update, which is a slightly awkward caveat for a controller that is explicitly aimed at PS5 and PC players. Still, the pricing is aggressive enough for a niche accessory, especially when you remember that premium fight sticks from specialist brands often charge similar money without Sony’s first-party polish.
- Launch date: 6 August 2026
- Pre-orders: 12 June 2026
- Price: $200
- Platforms: PlayStation 5 and PC
- Included: built-in battery and carrying case
Sony’s 27-inch monitor targets console and PC players
The monitor is the cleaner pitch. Sony says the 27-inch display uses an IPS panel with QHD resolution of 2560 x 1440 pixels, supports VRR, and can hit up to 120 Hz when connected to a PS5 or PS5 Pro, or up to 240 Hz on compatible PCs. It also ships with that fold-out hook for charging DualSense, which is either a neat convenience or a very Sony piece of industrial design, depending on how much desk clutter you tolerate.
It will go on sale in the US and Japan on 27 August 2026 for $350. That price puts it in a crowded middle ground: cheaper than many boutique gaming monitors, but not exactly impulse-buy territory either. Sony is clearly betting that a first-party monitor with PS5-friendly features can attract buyers who want one display for both console and PC without giving up refresh rate or resolution.
Pulse Elevate arrives later this year
The third product, Pulse Elevate, is the least defined so far. Sony has confirmed the wireless speakers are part of the same accessory family, but their release window is only described as coming closer to the end of the year. For now, the message is simple: Sony is building a more complete PlayStation desktop ecosystem, and it wants players to buy into the whole setup one accessory at a time.

