News Digging > Culture > Sony’s Deep Earth Collection Brings New Colors To PS5 And DualSense – SlashGear
Sony’s Deep Earth Collection Brings New Colors To PS5 And DualSense – SlashGear
Sony's Deep Earth Collection Brings New Colors To PS5 And DualSense - SlashGear,Sony is gearing up to launch the Deep Earth Collection for the PlayStation 5. You don't have to wait long to get the new console covers and DualSense colors.

Sony’s Deep Earth Collection Brings New Colors To PS5 And DualSense – SlashGear

Sony has given PlayStation fans a teaser look at its upcoming Deep Earth Collection, which brings new colors to the DualSense controller and the PS5 via console covers. Two of the three new color options are quite bolt: Cobalt Blue and Volcanic Red. The Sterling Silver color, meanwhile, is more subtle, essentially nudging the PS5 from its standard pearly white to a silvery shade.

According to Sony’s design team, these three new color options were inspired by Earth itself — specifically its depths, hence the name. All three colors have a metallic finish that is barely visible in the teaser Sony shared during its September 14 “State of Play” broadcast. That difficult-to-perceive nature may be intentional, as the company refers to the finish as an “undertone.” If you find the red or blue option particularly appealing, you won’t have to wait too long to get it: they arrive on November 3. Silver fans, however, will have to wait until January 26, 2024, to get ahold of that variant.

PS5 Deep Earth Collection preorders start in October

Sony

PlayStation 5 owners will be able to order the new Deep Earth Collection console covers and DualSense controllers starting on October 4. The console covers will be priced at $59.99 and the new DualSense options at $74.99 in the United States; the same collection will also go up for sale in Japan, the U.K., and multiple European countries, as well. According to Sony, you’ll have to order either directly from its PlayStation storefront or from “select” retailers, which haven’t yet been named.

The controller is unchanged from the standard version, color aside. The same goes for the console covers, which are essentially plastic shells that users can slip onto their existing console in place of the white default cover. Of course, these are just the latest options from Sony itself — if you’re willing to go the third-party route, there are many different designs available, including a different type of cover that has a much larger air vent for supposedly better thermal management.