
Today, Microsoft and Halo Studios announced they’re remaking the original Halo again as Halo: Campaign Evolved. The remake is sprucing up the shooter’s campaign, adding three new prequel levels, and will support up to four-player cooperative runs. The biggest news out of the announcement, however, is that the game is also coming to PlayStation 5, and it sounds like Master Chief’s adventures will also be coming to PlayStation for the foreseeable future.
This was confirmed on a livestream from the Halo World Championship after the remake’s announcement. Halo Studios community director Brian “ske7ch” Jarrard said that Halo is a multiplatform series “going forward.” The remake supports crossplay between platforms, so if you want to get your old co-op buddies together after 25 years, you can do that no matter what system they’re playing on. And it sounds like that will be the case with future games, as well.
Confirmed: Halo will be on PlayStation “going forward” starting with the Combat Evolved remake. pic.twitter.com/y23v1B3mfV
— AmericanTruckSongs9 (@ethangach) October 24, 2025
In a post on the PlayStation Blog, Jarrad teased that Halo Studios may have more Halo announcements for PlayStation 5 owners in the future, saying, “As the Master Chief once said: ‘I think we’re just getting started.’” If the series is coming to a new audience this many entries in, I wouldn’t be surprised if we also see the Master Chief Collection on PlayStation in the coming years. The compilation includes all the Halo games up to 5: Guardians, including the spin-offs Reach and 3: ODST, which don’t follow Master Chief but instead tell separate stories in Bungie and Halo Studios’ sci-fi universe. This would also be as good a time as any to bring Guardians and Infinite, the two most recent games in the series which aren’t included in the collection, to PlayStation 5 as well.
All of this comes after reports of Microsoft enforcing new profit goals on its Xbox division, seemingly resulting in a complete rethinking of the gaming brand’s direction.




