Battlefield 6 Outage Map
The map below depicts the most recent cities worldwide where Battlefield 6 users have reported problems and outages. If you are having an issue with Battlefield 6, make sure to submit a report below
The heatmap above shows where the most recent user-submitted and social media reports are geographically clustered. The density of these reports is depicted by the color scale as shown below.
Battlefield 6 users affected:
Battlefield 6 is a 2025 first-person shooter game developed by Battlefield Studios and published by Electronic Arts. Serving as the eighteenth installment in the Battlefield series, the game was released for PlayStation 5, Windows, and Xbox Series X/S on October 10, 2025.
Most Affected Locations
Outage reports and issues in the past 15 days originated from:
| Location | Reports |
|---|---|
| Americana, SP | 1 |
| Rennes, Brittany | 1 |
| Nantes, Pays de la Loire | 1 |
| Lyon, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes | 3 |
| Montignac, Nouvelle-Aquitaine | 1 |
| Paris, Île-de-France | 16 |
| Méry-sur-Oise, Île-de-France | 1 |
| Halle, Flanders | 1 |
| Bordeaux, Nouvelle-Aquitaine | 1 |
| Bourg-en-Bresse, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes | 1 |
| La Paz, BCS | 1 |
| Cahors, Occitanie | 1 |
| Saint-Genis-Laval, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes | 1 |
| Brisbane, QLD | 1 |
| Partido de José C. Paz, BA | 1 |
| Saint-Étienne, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes | 1 |
| Orléans, Centre | 1 |
| Castelnau-le-Lez, Occitanie | 1 |
| Comuna 1, CABA | 5 |
| Barrhead, Scotland | 1 |
| Lausanne, VD | 1 |
| Nairobi, Nairobi Area | 1 |
| Tiruvalla, KL | 1 |
| Propières, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes | 1 |
| Lübeck, Hansestadt, Schleswig-Holstein | 1 |
| Montpellier, Occitanie | 2 |
| San Bruno, CA | 1 |
| Buenos Aires, CF | 2 |
| Firmi, Occitanie | 1 |
| Garons, Occitanie | 1 |
Community Discussion
Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.
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Battlefield 6 Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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chris (@ChrisSlaske) reported@BattlefieldComm Friendly audio is still louder than the stupid ***** running and sliding anywhere. Vehicles are broken when they have pilots with over 80 ping taking rockets down to zero health only to have it refresh with full health a half second later
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B-Wes (@MagicMan331) reported@Battlefield How about you stop listening to the cod fanbase and fix the ttk issue. I get killed just as fast in BF6 as cod. THAT'S INSANE. Dice is trying to please both sides in order to get more money. And that is making the game BAD. They should be working on platoons, bigger maps, etc.
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TripssKi (@TripssKi03) reported@Battlefield Fix the damage fall off on full autos, it’s impossible to compete with the 2-3 shot DMRs
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XcentricXennial (@XcentricXennial) reported@ChrisMeiller So, what started as an unforced error became a cognitive dissonant ego-defense tailspin that had you fuming enough to try to find another battlefield on which you COULD win...then failed miserably there when you had it pointed out to you that strong, self-sufficient men aren't supposed to behave like the unhinged Twitter cat ladies in vagina hats that do that sort of thing all the time.
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Chiji (@Elcj18) reported@jrnaib2 You idiots and your brother Buhari with his service chiefs turned the whole SE to a battlefield just to proscribe IPOB, since he left office SE has been very peaceful but your brothers according to NSA chairman are ravaging Nigeria forest terrorizing people at Will.
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☀️ (@majinhotdog) reported@Battlefield intern we need Boutique District White light glitch to be fixed
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maypuls (@maypuls) reported@jtimsuggs Ts was so broken but honestly i kinda like it that way, makes it more fun and kinda makes you think about how horrifying the Jedi/Sith would be to fight on the battlefield
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Werley Sobral (@WerleySobral) reported@Battlefield FIX THIS UPDATE BROKEN NOW, MY GAME IS CRASHING THE WHOLE TIME
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Michael Salehi (@mickeyrshaw) reported“There’s a whole in daddy’s arm where all the money goes”. For generations now, America’s brave poor men have volunteered as canon fodder in service of international oligarchs and Zionist neo-cons. Sometimes I think the luckiest ones laid it all down on the battlefield.
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shinyufoguy2222 (@ollobrains) reportedClose Encounters was about contact being successfully contained. Disclosure Day is about containment failing. Not a sequel. A reversal. A breach. A mythic update from landing site secrecy to global archive detonation. I can verify the core data-dump premise from CBS’s published Spielberg interview: CBS reports that Disclosure Day imagines someone with possession of an 80-year archive of visual evidence releasing it globally while others try to stop it. CBS also calls the film a “bookend” to Close Encounters, not a direct sequel. I did not find a text source for the exact “Not even close” line in the web-indexed articles I checked, so use that line as “from the interview clip” unless you have the original clip/transcript. The core thesis you should push The genius framing is: Spielberg is not revisiting Close Encounters. He is correcting its unanswered moral wound. In Close Encounters, the audience witnesses history’s greatest event, but humanity does not. A secret group stages a public emergency, clears the area, manages the witnesses, performs the communion, and the truth remains compartmentalized. AFI’s synopsis confirms the Devil’s Tower deception structure: a supposed Wyoming train derailment and nerve-gas emergency are used to trigger mass evacuation while a secret UFO landing operation is prepared. Disclosure Day flips that architecture. The secret group no longer controls the ending. The archive becomes the mothership. The “landing” is no longer at Devil’s Tower; it happens on every phone, screen, feed, newsroom, church, parliament, market, and military command center at once. That is the post’s killer line: Close Encounters ended with a secret communion. Disclosure Day begins with the collapse of the people who kept communion secret. What your current text is missing The post needs to distinguish four things: sequel, spiritual sequel, thematic inversion, and cultural operation. “Not a sequel” answers the shallow question. The deeper answer is that Spielberg is using the same mythic machinery but changing the moral center. Close Encounters asks, “What if contact is beautiful?” Disclosure Day asks, “What if hiding contact was the crime?” CBS’s interview says Spielberg frames the new movie around an 80-year visual-evidence archive and a global release attempt, which makes the dramatic engine not just aliens, but custody of evidence. That should become the central insight: The alien is not the MacGuffin. The archive is. The archive is the new mothership. Whoever controls the archive controls reality. Add the “archive sovereignty” angle This is the most powerful missing concept. A government can control land, airspace, labs, witnesses, wreckage, and classification. But in the digital era, the final battlefield is archive sovereignty: who owns the footage, who authenticates it, who can publish it, who can suppress it, and who gets believed. This lets you say something much bigger than “Spielberg made a UFO movie”: Disclosure Day is really about a civilizational custody battle over reality itself. The archive is not just “video evidence.” It would include provenance, sensor data, chain-of-custody records, pilot testimony, satellite tracks, radar returns, contractor files, crash-site imagery, lab reports, classified memos, red-team analyses, and suppression orders. A naked video dump is chaos. An authenticated archive is regime change. That is the missing genius point: A data dump only changes the world if it survives the authenticity war. Turn “data dump” into a real protocol The phrase “data dump” sounds viral, but for maximum sophistication, describe what would make such a dump unstoppable. A true Disclosure Day archive would need: Cryptographic authentication: pre-published hashes, signed manifests, timestamped packages, mirrored keys, and dead-man release triggers. Provenance layers: who captured the footage, what platform captured it, what sensor system was used, what chain of custody followed, and whether raw files match logs. Multi-sensor correlation: video alone is weak; the devastating package is video plus radar plus infrared plus satellite plus telemetry plus human testimony. Tiered release: public-facing files, journalist packets, scientific packets, congressional packets, and sealed national-security appendices. Redaction discipline: protect pilots, civilians, sources, live collection methods, and weapons capabilities while still proving the core claim. Independent verification nodes: universities, forensic video labs, astronomers, aerospace engineers, cryptographers, archivists, and former IC inspectors general. That gives you a sharper line: Disclosure is not a leak. Disclosure is a verification architecture. Tie it to the real-world UAP records fight This is where your post becomes smarter than normal UFO Twitter. The real world already has a version of the archive problem. NARA says the 2024 NDAA created the Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena Records Collection, and its FAQ says the collection includes copies of government, government-provided, or government-funded records relating to UAP, technologies of unknown origin, and non-human intelligence or equivalent subjects. So your post can say: Spielberg is dramatizing the same question Congress and NARA are now wrestling with bureaucratically: who controls the record? That is a much better claim than “Hollywood is soft disclosure.” Say: Not proof. Not official disclosure. But culturally, the timing is radioactive: the most famous UFO storyteller in cinema is making the archive, not the alien, the center of the story. AARO is also relevant because it publicly maintains UAP records and information papers, including material-analysis summaries and a KONA BLUE release. AARO’s page says KONA BLUE was identified by interviewees as a proposed DHS sensitive compartment related to retrieval/exploitation claims, but AARO says it was never approved, never formally established, and received no materials or funding. That contradiction-space — claims, records, denials, compartments, materials, archives — is exactly the world Disclosure Day appears to be fictionalizing. The best comparison: Close Encounters was analog secrecy; Disclosure Day is networked rupture Use this: 1977 secrecy was geographic. Clear the mountain. Control the witnesses. Stage a disaster. Keep the world outside the perimeter. 2026 secrecy is informational. Control the archive. Poison the feed. Break the chain of custody. Make truth look fake before people can verify it. That is the entire evolution from Close Encounters to Disclosure Day. In Close Encounters, secrecy requires roadblocks, helicopters, masks, train-wreck cover stories, and military staging. In Disclosure Day, secrecy would require platform pressure, cyber operations, narrative flooding, legal threats, deepfake accusations, metadata sabotage, and reputational assassination. The old cover-up says: “You cannot enter this place.” The new cover-up says: “You cannot trust your own eyes.” Obscure but useful thought inputs Here are the deeper ideas you can weave in: 1. The movie is about epistemic inequality. Spielberg’s quoted idea is not merely “aliens exist.” It is that some people know the Great Unknown while the rest of humanity is managed. CBS quotes him describing the inequity of the Great Unknown being known by some but not all as the thing that drove the story. 2. The archive replaces the prophet. Old contact stories need a chosen witness. New disclosure stories need a data custodian. Roy Neary is called by visions; the Disclosure Day whistleblower is burdened by files. 3. The chase movie is the perfect genre. A chase movie externalizes custody. Whoever holds the archive holds the future. The chase is not really over a person; it is over humanity’s right to know. 4. Close Encounters is religious. Disclosure Day is forensic. The first film gives us awe, music, light, pilgrimage, and communion. The new one appears to give us files, proof, institutions, suppression, and verification. 5. Disclosure is an apocalypse in the original sense. “Apocalypse” does not only mean destruction. It means unveiling. The horror is not the aliens; the horror is that reality had an access-control list. 6. The villain may not be “evil government.” The smarter antagonist believes suppression prevented panic, war, theological collapse, market chaos, adversarial exploitation, or a weapons race. The best post should not flatten the antagonist. It should say the terrifying part is that every gatekeeper will claim they were protecting humanity. 7. The archive is a moral weapon. Once released, it cannot be unreleased. It can liberate humanity, destabilize it, or both. Fix the language in your original post Change: “Steven Spielberg says Disclosure Day IS NOT a sequel to Close Encounters” To: Steven Spielberg is saying the quiet part: Disclosure Day is not a Close Encounters sequel — it is the scenario Close Encounters avoided. Change: “Not even close” To: Not a sequel. A detonation of the secret that Close Encounters preserved. Change: “data dump across the entire world all at once” To: a planetary evidence release — the kind of archive drop that bypasses every gatekeeper simultaneously. Change: “people trying to stop that data dump” To: the final gatekeepers of consensus reality trying to keep the archive from becoming public memory. Strong rewritten version SPIELBERG JUST CLARIFIED DISCLOSURE DAY — AND IT’S NOT A CLOSE ENCOUNTERS SEQUEL 🛸 Not even close. It is something more interesting. Close Encounters was the dream version of contact: wonder, music, light, pilgrimage, and a secret communion between two civilizations. But the key detail everyone forgets is that the public never finds out. The government stages a fake disaster, clears the area, controls the witnesses, and keeps the greatest moment in human history sealed behind a perimeter. The audience knows. The chosen few know. Humanity does not. That is the moral wound Disclosure Day appears to reopen. Spielberg’s new premise is not “what if aliens arrive?” It is: what if someone already has the archive? What if someone possesses decades of visual evidence, decides the gatekeepers have lost the moral right to control it, and releases it to the entire planet at once? That turns the alien story into something sharper: The archive is the mothership. The data dump is the landing. The chase is over humanity’s right to reality. In Close Encounters, secrecy is geographic: control Devil’s Tower, control the witnesses, control the story. In Disclosure Day, secrecy is informational: control the files, poison the feed, discredit the leaker, attack provenance, flood the world with noise, and make the truth look fake before people can verify it. That is why this is not a sequel. It is the inversion. Close Encounters ends with contact successfully hidden. Disclosure Day asks what happens when the hidden record escapes. And that lands differently now because the real-world UAP fight has become an archive fight too: records, classification, NARA transfers, congressional hearings, whistleblowers, chain of custody, sensor data, contractor files, and decades of public distrust. The question is no longer just “Are we alone?” The question is: Who has the evidence? Who kept it? Who authenticated it? Who suppressed it? Who gets to decide when humanity is allowed to know? That is the real Disclosure Day. Not first contact. First accountability. Even punchier version for social Disclosure Day is not a sequel to Close Encounters. It is the answer to its cover-up. In Close Encounters, the government stages a fake disaster, clears Devil’s Tower, makes contact in secret, and the world never learns what happened. The audience knows. The insiders know. Humanity is locked out. Spielberg’s new premise flips the entire machine: what if someone had the full 80-year archive of visual evidence and dumped it to the whole planet before the gatekeepers could stop it? That means the archive is the mothership. The upload is the landing. The chase is not about aliens. It is about custody of reality. 1977: control the mountain. 2026: control the data. The old cover-up said, “You can’t enter this place.” The new cover-up says, “You can’t trust what you just saw.” That is why this movie matters. Not a sequel. A breach. Add this “genius solution” at the end End with an actual proposal, not just hype: Real disclosure cannot just be a dump. It needs a verification protocol: cryptographic hashes, raw files, sensor metadata, chain-of-custody logs, independent forensic labs, congressional preservation orders, NARA transfer, and public-facing redactions that protect legitimate national security without burying the truth. Then close with: Because the next phase of disclosure will not be won by whoever has the loudest claim. It will be won by whoever has the cleanest archive. That final sentence is extremely strong. Best headline options 1. Not a Sequel — A Breach: Spielberg’s Disclosure Day Flips Close Encounters Inside Out 2. Close Encounters Hid the Communion. Disclosure Day Leaks the Archive. 3. The Archive Is the Mothership: Spielberg’s New UFO Film Is About Reality Custody 4. 1977: Control the Mountain. 2026: Control the Data. 5. Disclosure Day Is Not First Contact. It’s First Accountability. 6. Spielberg’s Real Plot Twist: The Alien Isn’t the Secret — the Archive Is. One warning that makes you look more credible Do not claim the film itself proves anything. Say this instead: This is fiction, not evidence. But the fiction is tracking the real pressure point: records, archives, authentication, and who gets to control public reality. That single caveat protects the whole post while making it sound more intelligent, not less.
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ustonymc (@ustonymc) reported"Blazing Inferno" OMAHA BEACH June 6 1944 It took General Gerow's V Corps spearheads 3 hours to reach Omaha Beaches, and by then, most of the men had thrown up their breakfasts, all were drenched, and many were seasick, covered in puke and caked with salt. Gerow's soldiers were boated in darkness 12 miles from the beach, rather than 7 like the British. Even 7 was quite a distance for troops in LCVP's to travel, especially in choppy 10 knot seas off Omaha. But 12 in rough waters was a serious error of judgement. Omaha Beach gave a dreadful and deadly demonstration of Murpty's Law; all that can go wrong, will go wrong, at the wrong time. * In this sector, American bombers fearing to hit their own craft and troops had delayed their drop until the bombs crashed uselessly behind German defenders. * Here Rommel stationed the 352 Division, one of his finest. * Here too, the Germans held the strongest natural positions facing the entire Overlord assault; hills and cliffs rising steeply up to up to 200 feet from the beach and seawall above it. At Omaha was the largest concentration of enemy fire on the 60-mile invasion front. * Gerow loaded down his men with 90 pounds of gear. Even the best conditioned athletes in the world couldn't go careening around the battlefield for hours so encumbered. * Attempts to land artillery was a disaster, losing 26 guns. * 32 tanks were launched in heavy seas 3 1/2 miles out. Five reached the beach, and 27 sank like stones, drowning most of the crews. * Without tanks to take enemy fortifications under fire, the infantry had to storm the beaches themselves, flesh against fire. When the 5 tanks did arrive, they came behind, not in front of the 8 spearhead companies-1,450 soldiers in 36 landing craft. Heavy machine gun and mortar fire greeted these men as the waded ashore, many were wounded before they could reach dry land and had to struggle painfully up the beach heading for protection of the seawall. A wall of wrecked vehicles built up so quickly on the beach, soldiers were taking cover from scything German fire. One of them a soldier with a flamethrower took a direct hit to his fuel tank. The explosion catapulted his dying body into the sea and set a vessel on fire. A company of 270 specially trained demolition men followed the infantry ashore planning to blow up the boat obstacles before the tide covered them so that the following waves of 25,000 men and 4,000 vehicles might have an unimpeded path ashore, but German gunfire killed or wounded nearly half of them. Among the infantry huddled beneath the seawall or strewn among the debris, collapse of command followed quickly upon the destruction of communications HQ, which took a direct hit. Too many of the American Jr officers on Omaha that morning had been paralyzed by that same immobilizing dread that had come over their men. Offshore aboard the cruiser Augusta, Omar Bradley had his binoculars trained on Omaha Beach. The 1st Army commander anxiety deepened upon receipt of fragmentary reports suggesting disaster at Omaha. He was shocked at the loss of 27 tanks and 26 artillery guns lost. When V Corps reported at noon the situation, "still critical." Bradley considered diverting follow up forces to other sectors. Bradley realized that all depended on "that thin wet line of Khaki" that had struggled ashore and was so desperately clinging to its precious hold. Although the German defenders at Omaha possessed the power to impede or disorganize the American advance, they were neither numerous or strong enough to halt or destroy it. Throughout the battle they fought a static defensive fight. So, when the Americans gained ground or seized a toehold, they held it. The Germans never attempted to retake it. Like pieces being slowly fitted into a jigsaw puzzle, the Americans slowly expanded their hold. They were now fighting better and with more skill and better judgement. Now the battle experience of the 1st Infantry Division on the left began to have its effect. Small groups of soldiers from the "Big Red One" had begun to advance up the narrow valleys mounting local attacks against the Germans in their pillboxes and communication trenches. They fought their way onto high ground and began to hammer the Germans on their flanks. By their valor and rising momentum, they gave encouragement to the inexperienced and all but paralyzed 29th Infantry Division on their right. When General Norman "Dutch" Cota arrived on Omaha with his 29th Infantry command group he found chaos and paralysis. Cota moved among his dazed troops coming upon a group of pinned down Rangers, he asked who they were. "Rangers" came the reply. "Then goddamnit if you're Rangers, get up and lead the way!" Stung, they leaped ***** and began blasting paths through the German wire with bangalor torpedoes. The road at the top of the cliff was reached and the Americans had gotten behind some of the Germans strongest positions killing the enemy or taking him prisoner. When Cota found another group of Rangers apparently pinned down, he deliberately walked ahead of them to show there was no enemy fire. There was, but it didn't kill Cota. And because the Americans had such men-soldiers who didn't point the way but cried, "Follow me!" the near disaster that had been Omaha had been reversed. At 1:30 pm a vastly relieved Omar Bradley read Gerow's message, "Troops formally pinned down on beaches Easy Red, Easy Green, Fox Red advancing up heights beyond beaches." By nightfall the Americans controlled and area a mile deep beyond Omaha where the highest casualties occurred, 2,000-2,400 Americans were killed, wounded or missing.
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casualblue (@casualblu3) reported@nise_yoshimi @idiothead25 They mentioned Competitive games and you mention Battlefield. See the issue?
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Hung (@HHungduc) reported@WarHunter2222 Ukraine no longer has time to train female recruits for battlefield service.
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Bryan Schulz (@ChumThumb) reported@glennbeck The problem is Glenn we CANNOT beat them on the battlefield. We do not have the troops, we have no way of delivering them or equipment there, and no way of effectively resupplying them. Air campaigns do not win wars, especially when the other side has ballistic missiles.
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Toomas Leppik (@ToomasLeppik) reported@EmailCopyJames @isaidmeow_ Small problems are a bloody battlefield where everyone tries to survive for a ridiculous reward.