Sony · Filed Oct 10, 2025 · Published Jun 11, 2026 · verified — real USPTO data

Sony Patents a System That Tunes Game Audio to Your Hearing Profile

Not everyone hears game audio the same way — and Sony is filing patents to do something about it. This system would automatically reshape a game's sound output to fit a player's specific hearing needs, in real time.

Sony Patent: Personalized Hearing Adjustments for PS5 — figure from US 2026/0158387 A1
FIG. 1A — rendered from the official USPTO publication PDF.
Publication number US 2026/0158387 A1
Applicant Sony Interactive Entertainment Inc.
Filing date Oct 10, 2025
Publication date Jun 11, 2026
Inventors Danjeli Schembri, Christopher George Buchanan, Naoise Tobin, Michael Lee Jones, Calum Armstrong, Alexei Ashton Derek Smith
CPC classification 463/35
Grant likelihood Medium
Examiner CENTRAL, DOCKET (Art Unit OPAP)
Status Docketed New Case - Ready for Examination (Mar 12, 2026)
Document 22 claims

How Sony's hearing-aware game audio actually works

Imagine you have some hearing loss in the high-frequency range — explosions come through fine, but you miss quiet dialogue or high-pitched sound cues. Normally you'd fiddle with system-wide equalizer settings and hope for the best. Sony's patent describes a smarter fix: a user hearing profile that the console actually reads before adjusting the game's audio.

The idea is that the system analyzes what kinds of sounds are about to be played — speech, music, sound effects — and then adjusts each of those layers individually to match your hearing requirements, not just a generic accessibility preset.

In practice, that could mean dialogue gets boosted and sharpened for someone with high-frequency loss, while the soundtrack stays untouched. It's a more targeted approach than turning on subtitles and calling it a day.

How the system matches audio components to a user profile

The patent describes a three-step pipeline built into the video game system itself:

  • Obtain a user profile — the system reads a stored profile that describes the player's hearing requirements (think: frequency ranges they struggle with, or conditions like tonal hearing loss).
  • Determine audio content — before or during playback, the system identifies what kind of audio is being sent out — speech, ambient sound, music, effects — treating these as separate audio components.
  • Adjust per component — based on the intersection of the user's profile and what's actually playing, the system applies targeted adjustments to each audio layer independently.

The key distinction from a simple system-wide EQ is that adjustments are content-aware. A loud action sequence and a quiet conversation would each be processed differently based on what the profile says the user needs, rather than applying a blanket filter across everything.

The patent is broad and platform-agnostic in its language, covering any "video game system" — so this could theoretically live in console firmware, a controller, or companion software.

What this means for hearing-accessibility in gaming

For the roughly 15% of adults who have some degree of hearing loss, standard game audio settings are a blunt instrument. Turning up the master volume helps with some sounds and overwhelms others. Sony targeting per-component audio adjustments tied to a personal profile is a meaningful step toward making games genuinely playable for more people, not just technically accessible on paper.

From a strategic angle, Sony has been pushing accessibility features on PlayStation for several years — the Access controller being the most visible example. A hearing-profile system built at the OS or firmware level would extend that commitment into audio, and could apply across all games without requiring developers to do extra work.

Editorial take

This is quiet, useful accessibility infrastructure — the kind that doesn't make headlines at a press event but genuinely improves daily life for a large segment of players. The patent is broad, which means it's more of a staked claim on the concept than a detailed engineering blueprint, but the intent is clear and the need is real.

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Source. Full patent text and figures from the official USPTO publication PDF.

Editorial commentary on a publicly published patent application. Not legal advice.