A new voice command feature is available in the second PS5 beta. | Photo by Vjeran Pavic / The Verge
Sonyâs latest PS5 beta, which began rolling out Wednesday, adds support for a new âHey PlayStation!â voice command you can use to open games, apps, and settings and control movies and songs. Iâve been able to test the new feature, and to my surprise, it actually works quite well, and I could see it being a genuinely useful way to navigate the consoleâs UI.
One thing I was happy to see was that the voice command feature was opt-in â if that holds once the software update is released widely, that means youâll have to actively choose if you want your PS5 to be listening to your voice. After I installed the beta, I had to dig into the PS5âs settings to a new âVoice Command (Preview)â section to turn it on.
When you do, your PS5 will show you instructions on how to prompt the voice command feature â just say âHey PlayStationâ (after making sure your mic isnât muted and that your console is connected to the internet). The instructions also include a list of some things you can ask your PlayStation to do, like open a specific game or pause music.
Screenshot by Jay Peters / The Verge
Here are some of voice commands available.
Once the feature is on, when you say âHey PlayStation,â a pulsating white dot will appear in the top left corner of your screen. When you say your command, itâll appear as text next to the dot. In my testing, if the console understood my command, such as âgo to the main menuâ or âopen Fortnite,â it would then do the thing.
When I would make a more vague statement, such as just the word âPersona,â my PS5 instead shows games it thinks are in realm of what Iâm looking for. If it found just one option, I could say âyesâ or ânoâ to opening it. If it found a few, it presented them as a numbered list, and I could say the number to go to that thing or âsee moreâ to view a page of search results.
Screenshot by Jay Peters / The Verge
When your PS5 is listening for a command, youâll see the dot and the box in the top-left corner of your screen.
Screenshot by Jay Peters / The Verge
And hereâs an example of what your PS5 might show when it doesnât exactly know what you want.
In my short testing, my PS5 accurately translated the vast majority of my phrases, even ones with made up video game words like âGreedFallâ and âGungeonâ (for Enter the Gungeon). It responded promptly nearly every time I said âHey PlayStation,â though Iâm not sure if having my DualSense controller persistently listening for my voice will affect its already middling battery life. (The PS5âs voice commands also work with a DualShock 4 connected to an external mic, a Pulse 3D wireless headset, or the PS5 media remote, according to a Sony support document.) And if youâd prefer to not have your PS5 listening for you all the time, you can turn that off and use still voice commands from a new âVoiceâ option thatâs available when you tap the PlayStation button.
Personally, Iâm not sure how often Iâll end up using these voice commands. But Iâve been impressed with what Iâve tried, and I could see how others might prefer voice commands to navigating the PS5âs sometimes clunky UI. It might be easier to jump to a game buried in your game library just by asking for it, for example. And if you say âHey PlayStation, turn off,â itâll begin to put itself into rest mode, which might actually be an easier way to turn it off than what we already have.
I tested the PS5âs beta âHey PlayStationâ voice command, and itâs actually good! https://t.co/6Zfhnhc1v5 pic.twitter.com/G7ygcLOvps
â Jay Peters (@jaypeters) February 10, 2022
If you do use voice commands, you should know that Sony will record your voice for to be used for analysis. âWhen you enable Voice Command (Preview), voice data and interactions will be collected and processed exclusively for operation, analysis, and improvement of the feature in accordance with our Privacy Policy,â Sony says in a support document. However, if you do not want your voice data to be analyzed, you can opt-out in settings.
Screenshot by Jay Peters / The Verge
The Voice Data Collection options can be found in the PS5âs Privacy settings menu.
The PS5âs voice commands are available for people on the beta released Wednesday, though the feature only works in English and for users with accounts registered in the US and the UK. The beta also includes updates to the PS5âs UI, party chat, and more.