Sony says that profit is mostly down to "hardware cost reductions." That's probably a reference to the cheaper, slimmer PS4 that came out last September -- a common move (hello, PSone and PlayStation 2 slimline) to reduce manufacturing costs. Software sales played a part too, especially those sold direct through the PlayStation Network. The PlayStation 4 is unquestionably a juggernaut -- the 20 million sold last year puts the console near 60 million lifetime sales. While impressive, Sony expects that momentum to slow down a little. A slide in today's earning report shows predicted console sales at 18 million for the 2017 financial year.

While PlayStation 4 soars, the rest of Sony's business is stumbling. The company's mobile division saw revenue drop 32.7 percent year-over-year, from 1,128 billion yen to 759 billion yen. Some smart restructuring and "a focus on high value-added models" did, however, help the team swing from a 61.4 billion yen operating loss in 2016 to a 10.2 billion yen ($92 million) profit in 2017. Sony's Xperia X Performance was a total dud last year, priced too high and offering little over its flagship competition, which makes the feat all the more impressive. Hopefully the Xperia XZ Premium, with its 4K display and super slow-mo video camera, fares better.

Sony's camera sensors have always been a decent money-maker, however revenues fell from 684 billion yen in 2016 to 580 billion yen ($5.175 billion) in 2017. Profit dropped by 22.1 billion yen year-over-year to 47.3 billion yen ($422 million), due to foreign exchange rates and the knock-on effect of the 2016 Kumamoto earthquakes. Sony's movie and TV business was also poor, posting an 80.5 billion yen ($719 million) loss in 2016.

All told, Sony's financial results weren't too pretty. The company reported revenue of 7,603 billion yen (roughly $67.9 billion), which is down 6.2 percent on the previous year. Operating income, or profit, was down 5.5 billion yen, or roughly 1.9 percent to 288.7 billion yen (roughly $2.6 billion). There is cause for optimism, however -- as Reuters reports, the company expects profits to rise 73.2 percent in the next financial year. That's because its image sensor business should be back at full-strength, propping up the other parts of Sony that regularly post a loss.