According to its latest sales figures, Sony’s consoles outsold Microsoft’s consoles three-to-one in the quarter ending June 30. During its quarterly earnings call yesterday, Sony said that it had sold a combined total of 3.5 million units of the PS4 and PS3, compared to Microsoft’s quarterly figure of just 1.1 million Xbox One and Xbox 360 consoles. Neither Sony or Microsoft opted to break down these numbers into per-console sales figures, but using previous announcements as a baseline it’s probably around 70-30 in favor of the PS4 and Xbox One. In short, this means Sony sold around 2.5 million PS4s last quarter, compared to about 800,000 Xbox Ones. This equates to some very unfavorable total global sales figures for the Xbox One, which we’ll discuss below.

Earlier in the week, Sony surprised everyone by announcing that it had actually made a profit [PDF] during the April-June quarter. This is mostly due to restructuring and selling off assets — Sony has spun off its TV business into a separate subsidiary, sold its PC business, and sold its shares in Square Enix — but strong sales of the PS4 definitely helped matters along. While Sony gave us a combined total of 3.5 million PS4s and PS3s sold during the quarter, the last exact PS4 sales figure (7 million) was way back in April. By our estimations, the PS4 is probably sitting at around 9 million consoles sold globally.

Read our featured story: Playing the sales game: Do game releases actually increase console sales?

Microsoft also used its quarterly earnings call to announce that it had shipped 1.1 million combined units of the Xbox One and Xbox 360 in the April-June quarter. Note that Sony announced sold units, while Microsoft stuck with shipped units (which means consoles might be sitting on retailer shelves). It’s getting a little bit farcical by this point, but Microsoft hasn’t actually given us an exact Xbox One sales figure since the end of 2013 (3 million). Our estimates put the Xbox One, globally, at around 5 million sold units.

Of course, it’s important to note that the $400 Kinect-free Xbox One was only available for three weeks at the end of the April-June quarter — and Microsoft says Xbox One sales doubled during that period. Sony would appear to be smashing Microsoft to pieces at the moment, but the sales figures could be a lot closer by the end of the next quarter. Even if Microsoft does make up some ground, though, the PS4 shows no sign of slowing down — and with an installed base that’s now almost twice as large as the Xbox One (9 million vs. 5 million), I fear the damage has already been done.