Because sometimes, the ghost just needs to be rebooted. Have you battled the 80001fff? Did the microwave trick work? Let the community know in the forums—and may your next remote play session be error-free.
A cold, unfeeling box appears:
After digging through hundreds of forum posts and technical documentation, the 80001fff error almost always points to one culprit: ps remote play error code 80001fff
No explanation. No “Try this.” Just a hexadecimal ghost story.
Go into your router’s settings, find the IPv6 toggle, and turn it OFF . Restart both your PlayStation and your device. This forces everything onto the simpler, more stable IPv4 protocol. Remote Play loves IPv4. Because sometimes, the ghost just needs to be rebooted
You’ve had a long day. You just want to escape to your favorite game on the couch, in bed, or—let’s be honest—on the office bathroom break. You fire up PS Remote Play, that magical feature that turns your tablet, phone, or laptop into a window into your PlayStation. The screen flickers. The controller vibrates. Then, the dream dies.
And if not? There’s always the old standby: turn everything off, unplug the router for two full minutes (clear those ARP tables!), plug it back in, and try again. Let the community know in the forums—and may
The fix is almost always in your network settings—specifically, taming IPv6 and verifying UPnP. If you do that, 80001fff will retreat back into the digital abyss where it belongs.
Because sometimes, the ghost just needs to be rebooted. Have you battled the 80001fff? Did the microwave trick work? Let the community know in the forums—and may your next remote play session be error-free.
A cold, unfeeling box appears:
After digging through hundreds of forum posts and technical documentation, the 80001fff error almost always points to one culprit:
No explanation. No “Try this.” Just a hexadecimal ghost story.
Go into your router’s settings, find the IPv6 toggle, and turn it OFF . Restart both your PlayStation and your device. This forces everything onto the simpler, more stable IPv4 protocol. Remote Play loves IPv4.
You’ve had a long day. You just want to escape to your favorite game on the couch, in bed, or—let’s be honest—on the office bathroom break. You fire up PS Remote Play, that magical feature that turns your tablet, phone, or laptop into a window into your PlayStation. The screen flickers. The controller vibrates. Then, the dream dies.
And if not? There’s always the old standby: turn everything off, unplug the router for two full minutes (clear those ARP tables!), plug it back in, and try again.
The fix is almost always in your network settings—specifically, taming IPv6 and verifying UPnP. If you do that, 80001fff will retreat back into the digital abyss where it belongs.