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Battlefield 6

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

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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:

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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
Argentan, Normandy 1
Cadiz, Andalusia 1
Nantes, Pays de la Loire 3
Bitche, ACAL 1
Paris, Île-de-France 32
Aurillac, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes 1
Annecy, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes 2
Arvert, Nouvelle-Aquitaine 1
Angoulême, Nouvelle-Aquitaine 1
Nice, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur 1
Pessac, Nouvelle-Aquitaine 1
Marseille, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur 5
Pont-Scorff, Brittany 1
Haguenau, ACAL 1
Labenne, Nouvelle-Aquitaine 1
Fort-de-France, Martinique 1
Montpellier, Occitanie 1
Troyes, ACAL 2
Dole, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté 2
Jarville-la-Malgrange, ACAL 1
Namur, Wallonia 1
Toulouse, Occitanie 1
Villeurbanne, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes 1
Grenoble, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes 1
City of Brussels, Brussels Capital 1
Hayes, England 1
Chambray-lès-Tours, Centre 1
Angers, Pays de la Loire 1
Langon, Nouvelle-Aquitaine 1
Johnstone, Scotland 1
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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:

  • specurial
    MRez (@specurial) reported

    @BattlefieldInte @Battlefield Dear @Battlefield, give us reconnect time(3-5min) after getting disconnect. Why we should lose rp,match with friends,... For timeout or network issue #Battlefield6 #Battlefield

  • Coyote_Operator
    Jarrod (@Coyote_Operator) reported

    @Ryangofett_2490 The issue is you have the same group that buys the sports games every year regardless of its fixed or not because they are so casual it doesn’t matter to them and gaming companies know this. These are the same players who will say “2042 is better than battlefield 6” or the same people who say the game is fine and they play 500 of the game, all of which were spent either prone off the map, or sitting in a legitimate corner all round doing absolutely nothing

  • Varrie_of_Varin
    Everlasting Spring Varin (@Varrie_of_Varin) reported

    @esfengari @Matty_OW I played 1,000 hrs worth of Battlefield and still got completely stuck at a 1.3 K/D. Which is purely skill issue. Just playing the game wasn't making me any better. Aim trainers force you off autopilot so you can actually see and fix the hidden mistakes holding you back.

  • 6db560c87fec4ea
    Marwan (@6db560c87fec4ea) reported

    @BattlefieldComm You can notice it through them keeping apologizing in their posts and stating that they can't identify the root cause of the bugs such as the lighting bug in redsec. Many bugs takes them too long to fix, if these bugs are ever fixed.

  • sc_amba
    Voices of Ambazonia (@sc_amba) reported

    @AmericaRecharge You people like fueling problems. For how long do you want Ukraine to be used as the battlefield of world powers?

  • jarvisnuss
    Jarvis Nuss (@jarvisnuss) reported

    Nordic Air Defence putting the K100XR through a public live intercept is a better battlefield economics lesson than another NATO procurement panel. A one pound carbon fiber interceptor, roughly a foot long, over 220 mph, loitering 20 minutes, priced in the few-thousand-dollar band, attacks the problem at the level where Shahed math actually lives. The old air defense reflex spends exquisite missiles against cheap machines and calls the ledger classified. That works until the magazine is empty and the factory has become the true front line. Counter-drone systems now have to win the exchange ratio before they win the engagement, because autonomy has moved attrition into spreadsheets. The serious part sits behind the little projectile, in the industrial posture around it. Small teams, local assembly in Poland, vehicle pods with Volvo Defense, software-driven interceptors that can be iterated under combat pressure. Europe does not need another doctrine paper on resilience. It needs more machines that make cheap attacks expensive for the attacker.

  • VipeViper
    Rob from Amsterdam 🇳🇱 △ (@VipeViper) reported

    @ruswar @NikanorTerentov That's basically the problem. You guys live in a virtual reality --until you end up dying on the battlefield, just like this guy.

  • _jameshatfield_
    James Hatfield (@_jameshatfield_) reported

    @Bellamy_Saluter @Handre Recurring manufactured financial crisis. You have to set the stage, create the problem before you present the solution. It’s called shaping the battlefield.

  • CryptoApprenti1
    Dr.Hash“Wesley” (@CryptoApprenti1) reported

    One thing today deserves thirty seconds of your actual attention. A war is turning the world's most important energy chokepoint into a battlefield. Crude is up 4.5%. And: gold fell 1.4%. Bitcoin broke down. The king of safe havens and the so-called digital gold went down holding hands. The market isn't broken. It's telling you something you don't want to hear: it never priced this war as a haven event. It priced it as an inflation event. Follow the money — Crude up → inflation expectations up → so the Fed has to hike → the 2-year Treasury hit 4.24% today, a one-year high → swaps now price a September hike as all but certain. A week ago that was 66%. Rates push up, and three things die at once: gold (pays no yield), the Nasdaq (valuation), Bitcoin (long duration). They aren't three markets today. They're three legs of the same trade. So you can throw this one out: "war is bullish for Bitcoin." It isn't wrong on timing — it's wrong at the root. You thought war delivers panic. The market received inflation. And inflation ends in hikes, and hikes only ever do one thing: kill everything that yields nothing and is priced off a story about the future. Bitcoin is both. The biggest crypto post today — nearly a million views — is someone hinting he's buying more. Number six on the board is "Brent crude surges 4.5% at the open." Nobody connected them. Number six is the pricing mechanism for number one. One last thing, for anyone who still wants the honest version: this chain has a switch, and it gets flipped Tuesday. US June CPI — data that contains none of this month's oil, and likely comes in soft. If it does, the hike gets priced out, and everything I just described reverses on the spot. I don't know what Tuesday brings. I know what today was: your hedge and your digital hedge died together. The least you can do is ask what the market actually thinks this war is.

  • LFCFabianFumpii
    Fabian Gaustad Wirtz/OpTic Fumpii (@LFCFabianFumpii) reported

    Lags on Battlefield 6 on PC does really annoying me much, i don’t know how to remove lags on it. I so need help not to lag on Battlefield 6 on my PC, on other games i do not lagging only in Battlefield 6.

  • unwaiverhesed
    Melissa ✡︎🇺🇸🇮🇱🎗️#OurPeopleAreHome (@unwaiverhesed) reported

    "Unsafe at MIT by Eliyahu Freedman July 7, 2026 for AISH MIT never investigated its antisemitism crisis. Professor Yossi Sheffi wrote the book the university wouldn't, showing how his own campus turned on its Jews. Dr. Yossi Sheffi is an unlikely candidate to write a chronicle of modern antisemitism. A globally renowned expert on supply chain management, based at MIT for the last 51 years, he is more often found in his office deep in research, or advising governments and Fortune 500 companies. But after what he witnessed on campus since October 7, 2023 — as an Israeli Jew who flew for the Israeli Air Force in the Six-Day War and the Yom Kippur War — he felt he had no choice but to “create an oral history” of what happened. “People are already saying it’s not that bad, it really didn’t happen, you know, people are exaggerating,” he told Aish[dot]com from his office in a recent interview. “So I just wanted to document it.” Harvard produced a 311-page report on antisemitism at the university, “kind of like a truth commission,” in Sheffi’s words. MIT never did. Into that silence, Sheffi stepped forward to write a readable chronicle of what happened on his own campus in his just-published book, Unsafe at MIT: A Chronicle of a Campus War on the Jews. Sunlight Is the Best Disinfectant Sheffi’s book follows the experiences of Jewish, Israeli, and occasionally non-Jewish students and faculty from October 7, 2023 through 2025. He wrote it, he says, “as a fight for just the truth” — because the administration, in his telling, is “still trying to shove it under the carpet.” Yossi Sheffi “I’ve been at MIT 51 years. It’s my home.” He knows the book carries a cost. He faces pressure not to draw attention to this chapter, and the risk of backlash from an administration he calls vindictive. He is writing it anyway. “We always said sunlight is the best disinfectant,” he says. The world, he believes, needs to know what happened. From Science to Slogans At the root of Sheffi’s grievance is what he sees as the hijacking of MIT’s scientific mission by a small group of ideological extremists, and by an administration that would not act quickly or decisively to enforce its own rules. “It’s not the MIT that I joined 51 years ago, which was about science and engineering,” he says. Photo: MIT Scientists Against Genocide Encampment in 2024 demanding MIT divest from research ties to the Israeli military. (Wiki commons) He traces the shift back further than October 7. “After the [George] Floyd murder, at MIT, if you apply for a faculty position, you had to write an article on how you support DEI,” he says. “Not how good your science is, not how good your engineering is, not how good your innovative papers are. No. How good are you at supporting DEI? It was, to me, a watershed.” The problem, as Sheffi sees it, was never diversity itself, but what the framework left out. “The DEI infrastructure really betrayed the Jews,” he says. “Because this is inclusion. The I is for inclusion. And this was DEI — but not including Jews.” After October 7 When Hamas invaded Israel on October 7, MIT’s Jewish and Israeli students expected their university to close ranks around them. Instead, within days, some classmates and faculty were justifying the massacre as “resistance.” Sheffi and a group of colleagues began holding regular lunches for some 150 shaken Jewish and Israeli students, a place to vent, to check in, to feel less alone. “There is a huge difference between Israelis and Americans,” he says. “We grew up in a country where we are the majority. We serve in the military. We are all much tougher than the Americans. The American Jews are afraid.” In this regard, he thinks in the future that American Jews need to learn from Israelis to keep their heads high, with a “much thicker skin” as opposed to abandon elite institutions like MIT. If the campaign against Israel was about tearing down, Sheffi’s instinct was to build. He points to Kalaniyot, a faculty-led initiative that has spread from MIT to several universities. “Kalaniyot was the response to the BDS,” he says. “And it’s going very well. It’s now in several universities and growing, bringing Israeli scientists and creating science collaboration with Israeli engineers and scientists.” The Quiet War That Continues The tent encampments and mass demonstrations have largely faded. What worries Sheffi now is quieter, and in some ways harder to fight. Social exclusion of Jews and Israelis. “It’s still going on,” he says. “Students are uncomfortable working with each other, and this is really affecting them. They don’t want to talk with Israelis, with Jewish students. Get out of the group. Just throw them out.” This is a serious issue at a place like MIT, where working in groups is key to scientific collaboration. “Today you develop an iPhone or a car or anything--- it’s a team of engineers. Working in teams is part of the MIT education. This actually hurts their education.” The New Battlefield Sheffi says he “proudly served in the Israeli Air Force during the Six-Day War, the Yom Kippur War, and multiple military operations in between.” When he left for Cambridge in 1975, he believed his fighting days were behind him. They were not. “I found myself drawn into another conflict,” he writes, one “waged not with weapons, but with slogans, intimidation, and institutional cowardice.” This last fight is being waged with the written word. It is the oldest Jewish response to those who would deny a people’s suffering — zachor, remember, and testify.""

  • miowritesxx
    miowrites (@miowritesxx) reported

    The small intestine is the core infrastructure for nutrient absorption. But when upstream digestion weakens — stomach acid, bile flow, pancreatic enzymes — food isn’t properly broken down. Partially digested food then spills into the small intestine. This undigested material becomes fuel for bacteria, leading to: abnormal fermentation gas production bile acid deconjugation irritating metabolic byproducts A place meant for absorption becomes a battlefield. Every meal sends new undigested material and bacterial metabolites into the small intestine, physically and chemically stressing the mucosa.

  • Burak_Keskin85
    Burak Keskin (@Burak_Keskin85) reported

    @Osint613 This satellite imagery is the exact reason why moscow is suddenly backtracking and playing the peaceful victim. Their logistics are broken, their refineries are on fire, and now their vessels are leaking fuel in the sea of azov. A regime getting completely dismantled on the battlefield has no choice but to pretend to be a victim on the diplomatic stage.

  • masifabbasi
    M Asif (@masifabbasi) reported

    @SportsxClub Indian commies are the worst and act as schoolgirls who get excited and dejected within a 15 min period. You wouldn't hand a sniper rifle to someone in a knife fight and then blame the weapon for not performing. That's what these commentators are doing. The technique that lets Sooryavanshi and Abhishek hit 30 ball centuries in India is a sniper rifle. Calibrated for specific conditions. Low bounce, minimal movement, predictable trajectories. And in those conditions, it's devastating. Now you take that same setup to conditions where the ball is swinging, seaming, bouncing at the throat. That's a knife fight. The weapon hasn't failed. You've changed the battlefield. There is no universal technique in cricket. There never has been. The stance that murders bowling on Indian decks physically cannot produce the same results where the ball does different things. That's biomechanics. That's physics. No amount of "intent" or "boss mode" overrides it. You berated Kohli for adapting his game surface to surface. Now you cry when players who don't adapt get exposed in foreign conditions. Pick one. Take these same batsmen back home. They'll start destroying attacks again. The players aren't broken. Unfortunately, your understanding of the game is.

  • Kouignaman40156
    Mirkwood Clearcutting (@Kouignaman40156) reported

    @BlueandGray1864 Saratoga is pretty much like this, too. And Brandywine Battlefield. And Valley Forge. Some of the smaller ones, like Cooch’s Bridge, don’t even get this much. Bennington has a huge memorial tower that is currently crumbling and no one will pay to fix.

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