The “PlayStation on Wheels” Hits a Dead End
ATLANTA — The high-tech dream of a “PlayStation on wheels” has officially hit a roadblock. Sony Honda Mobility (SHM), the ambitious joint venture between the electronics giant and the automotive veteran, announced this week that it is discontinuing the development and launch of its Afeela electric vehicle lineup.
The decision, made public on March 25, follows a massive strategic shift by Honda and a cooling global market for high-end electric vehicles. For Atlanta residents and tech enthusiasts who saw the sleek Afeela prototype at recent trade shows, the news marks a definitive “game over” for the brand’s physical cars.
The Road to the Shutdown
The collapse of the project was triggered by a series of financial and strategic recalculations at Honda. Earlier this month, Honda announced a projected $15.7 billion (2.5 trillion yen) writedown—its first annual loss in nearly 70 years.
As part of a broader retreat from aggressive electrification, Honda canceled its “0 Series” EV platform, which was intended to serve as the backbone for Afeela. Without this shared architecture, SHM lost access to the manufacturing “steel” needed to house Sony’s “software.”
- Market Realities: A cooling EV market in North America, combined with the loss of federal tax incentives and rising competition from lower-priced Chinese manufacturers, made the $90,000+ Afeela 1 a difficult sell.
- Asset Withdrawal: In a formal statement, SHM noted it could no longer utilize the “technologies and assets” originally promised by Honda, leaving the venture without a viable path to production.
Impact on Customers
The cancellation affects thousands of early adopters, particularly in the United States. While production was slated for an assembly plant in East Liberty, Ohio, the primary launch market was California.
| Feature | Current Status |
| Afeela 1 Sedan | Canceled (Deliveries were due late 2026) |
| Afeela SUV Concept | Canceled |
| Customer Reservations | Full Refunds being issued |
| Afeela Studio (Torrance, CA) | Operations being reevaluated |
The Future of the Partnership
While the cars themselves won’t see the light of day, the corporate entity of Sony Honda Mobility has not yet been legally dissolved. Both companies have expressed a desire to continue a “software-first” collaboration.
Instead of a standalone vehicle, Sony is expected to pivot toward becoming a Tier-1 supplier. This could see Sony’s “Safety Cocoon” sensing technology and PlayStation-integrated entertainment systems appearing in future Honda hybrid models or other third-party vehicles.
“The project was an attempt to merge two worlds,” said one industry analyst. “But Afeela has now joined the ‘Apple Car’ in the graveyard of tech-led automotive dreams that proved too complex for the current economy.”
For now, the only place you can still drive an Afeela is in the digital world; the car remains a playable vehicle in the PlayStation title Gran Turismo 7.

