If you’d already started stockpiling Blu-ray drives in a panic, you can exhale — for now. Buffalo has walked back its plan to abandon the market, meaning the discs you’ve spent years ripping, archiving and hoarding still have a hardware lifeline.
Back in February 2026, the Japanese peripheral maker told customers it would pull its Blu-ray drives from sale in July, blaming a shortage of the components needed to keep building them. Optical drives have been a slow-motion casualty of the streaming era, and Buffalo’s exit looked like one more nail in the coffin. Then, on July 9, 2026, the company reversed course: production continues.
Here’s the catch, and it’s a big one. Buffalo isn’t reinvesting in a long-term future for the format. It has simply managed to secure a fresh batch of the parts it was missing, and it will keep manufacturing drives only as long as that inventory holds out. When the components run dry, production stops — and Buffalo has warned there will be no advance notice. One day the drives will be on shelves; the next, they may quietly vanish.
The models continuing on include:
- BRXLPT6U3E series — external Blu-ray drives for PCs, from around US$170
- BRXLPTV63B series — from around US$156
- BRXLPTWOU3 series — around US$177
All three are external units designed to connect to a PC. Notably, some models in the lineup go beyond straightforward disc reading and writing: they support terrestrial digital broadcasting alongside BS/CS satellite broadcast viewing and recording — a feature set that speaks directly to the Japanese market, where recording broadcast TV to Blu-ray remains a genuine use case rather than a nostalgic one.
That broadcast angle helps explain why Buffalo bothered to fight for the parts at all. For anyone who relies on Blu-ray for physical-media playback, disc-based backups, or capturing over-the-air programming, an external drive is still the simplest bridge between old media and modern laptops that shipped without an optical bay years ago.
Still, this is a stay of execution, not a pardon. Buffalo’s messaging is refreshingly blunt about what’s happening: the drives live on borrowed time, tied to a finite pile of scavenged components. There’s no promise of a next generation, no roadmap, no reassurance that a fresh supply chain is waiting in the wings.
The practical takeaway is straightforward. If you actually need one of these drives — for archiving a disc collection, recording broadcasts, or simply keeping a Blu-ray player attached to your PC — buying sooner rather than later is the safer bet. The prices haven’t budged, the models are still listed, and the hardware works. But when Buffalo says there’ll be no warning, it’s worth taking the company at its word.