The latest rumour has it that Call of Duty could get old-gen players leaning forward a little closer to the screen. That’s right, we’re talking about Modern Warfare 4 possibly landing on PS4. But that wouldn’t surprise me because The Call of Duty franchise has continued to release its new games on previous-generation consoles, even six years after the launch of the PS5 and Xbox Series X.
Now before everyone starts reinstalling Warzone out of pure hype, let’s get one thing straight. Nothing officially has been released so this is very much leak territory. The kind of info that shows up, gets everyone talking, and then either turns out to be legit… or disappears like your KD after one bad match.
So what’s the deal?
According to the rumour, Modern Warfare 4 could still release on last-gen consoles like PS4. Which, if I’m being honest feels a bit wild in 2026. We’re deep into the PS5 era, and most big titles have already moved on. But COD has always been that one franchise that refuses to let go of its entire player base.
And when you think about it, it makes sense. Look around, there are still millions of players on PS4. Not everyone upgraded because not everyone can upgrade. So from Activision’s perspective, dropping support completely would basically mean leaving a massive chunk of the community behind. And COD doesn’t take that lightly.
At the same time, there’s a catch.
If this thing really does launch on PS4, you already know what the trade-off is going to be. Let’s be real, we’ve all seen it before. Cross-gen games always feel like they’re being held back just a little. The graphics get a little shitty and with that performance gets trimmed. So everyone starts taking small steps toward the “next-gen leap”. And once that happens, there is a classic split in the community. On one side, players are like: “Let everyone play. Keep it accessible.” And on the other side: “Can we PLEASE move on already and push the game forward?”

And both sides have a point.
What’s really interesting though is that none of this has actually been confirmed. Modern Warfare 4 itself hasn’t even been officially announced yet, even though leaks suggest it’s likely part of the 2026 lineup and could follow the usual late-year COD release window. So right now, this PS4 talk sits exactly where most COD rumours live, in that messy middle space between “this could happen” and “don’t bet your loadout on it.”
But let’s be real for a second.
If Activision does keep PS4 in the mix, it’s not because they’re stuck in the past. It’s because COD is one of the few franchises big enough to play both sides. New-gen polish and old-gen reach. The real question isn’t whether it can run on PS4, but whether it should. There comes a some point, where you’ve got to stop building for yesterday’s hardware and start building the game everyone actually wants to see. And if Modern Warfare 4 is supposed to be that next big step? Then this decision is going to say a lot about where Call of Duty is really headed next.