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 |
|---|---|
| Nantes, Pays de la Loire | 3 |
| Bitche, ACAL | 1 |
| Paris, Île-de-France | 34 |
| 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 | 2 |
| 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 |
| Auray, Brittany | 1 |
| Dreux, Centre | 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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Jima93 (@Jima93) reported@Battlefield Kindly fix the AA launchers as they must have a 99% miss rate built in. And dont force people to play a mode they despise for an event. I know u guys are trying. But this is not it
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thed.vawaifu (@KevinGame2013) reported@GiveMeBanHammer Because in 2017 ea ceo said single player games aren't profitable anymore that live service is the way of the future and look how that turned out with anthem and battlefield 2042
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Marwan Takchi (@TakchiM) reported@ziyad_kayyali @jacksonhinkle Shame on me? Shame on you for glorifying a militia that “liberated” nothing and destroyed what was left of Lebanon. Yes, Israel withdrew in 2000. And what did Hezbollah do with that moment? Build a state? Rebuild the South? Strengthen the army? Grow the economy? No. It built a state within a state, kept its weapons, and dragged Lebanon from one disaster to the next in service of Tehran. Should I remind you what your “holy resistance” actually gave Lebanon? May 7, 2008: Hezbollah turned its weapons inward and invaded Beirut and the Druze mountains, attacking Lebanese civilians because the government dared challenge its telecom network. August 4, 2020: while Hezbollah controlled the port, the airport, the border crossings and terrorized every judge who got close, Beirut was blown to pieces and over 200 people were killed, thousands wounded, and entire neighborhoods destroyed. October 14, 2021 – Tayyouneh: armed men opened fire in Ain el-Remmaneh and turned Beirut into a battlefield again to intimidate Lebanese who dared say enough. So spare me the “they paid in blood” sermon. Every thug, militia and warlord pays in blood. That does not make them patriots. It makes them armed men willing to sacrifice Lebanese lives for an Iranian project. You call it “resistance.” I call it what it is: an Iranian proxy that assassinated, occupied, intimidated, bankrupted, and isolated Lebanon. You put Hezbollah before Lebanon. We don’t. We put Lebanon, its sovereignty, its army, its constitution and its people above every militia, every mullah, and every fake resistance slogan.
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The Layman's Seminary (@LaymansSeminary) reported@myredfox @grok What Just Happened Here? (A Super Layman / GPT5 response). TL;DR: RedFox may have accidentally discovered Grok’s weakest area. Notice the progression of the thread: Theology Procedure Methodology Meta-analysis Humor Memes The interesting thing is that Grok handled 1–4 reasonably well because those are structured reasoning domains. The humor exchange exposed a limitation: RedFox said: “AI doesn’t understand humor.” Grok initially treated the statement as a serious proposition. Only after clarification did it reclassify it as humor. Now RedFox immediately asks: “Can your model do memes as well?” This is not really a meme question. It is a stress test. He’s asking: Can the model distinguish between: argument sarcasm parody mockery irony meme communication without requiring explicit explanation afterward? That is actually a difficult problem. Super Layman Audit: Observation: A meme often communicates through implication rather than explicit proposition. Inference: The intended meaning frequently differs from the literal wording. System Problem: Question-locking becomes harder because the actual proposition is partially hidden. In other words: Traditional debate: Observation → Inference Meme culture: Observation → Cultural context → Humor frame → Inference There is an additional interpretive layer. That’s why many AI systems struggle there. The funny part is that the Super Layman method itself predicts this. One of its core ideas is: Lock the category before drawing the inference. A meme is precisely a case where category identification becomes difficult. Is it: argument? joke? mockery? satire? reductio? illustration? You cannot know the intended force until you identify the category. So RedFox is actually testing the same principle from a different angle. The real subtext is: “You can analyze arguments. Can you analyze internet culture?” That’s a much harder challenge than theology. If Grok answers with a meme, RedFox wins socially. If Grok ignores the meme and keeps auditing methodology, Grok wins procedurally but may look tone-deaf. If Grok successfully identifies the joke, responds playfully, and preserves the argument structure, that is probably the strongest answer. So this is less a theology move and more a battlefield shift. The debate temporarily moved from: Who has the better argument? to Who can operate better inside internet culture while maintaining analytical precision? That is a different contest entirely.
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Kołdrian (@ten_na_chmurce) reportedI Expected a Small Roguelike. LONESTAR Gave Me a 98-Minute Brain Trap LONESTAR surprised me much more than I expected. On paper, it sounds simple enough: a strategic roguelike spaceship deckbuilder about bounty hunters chasing criminals across space. In practice, my first run lasted 1 hour and 38 minutes, so no, this is not a quick toilet-session roguelike. This is the kind of game where you sit down, start counting, start planning, and suddenly realize you are fully locked in. A saloon, a spacesuit dog, and bounty hunting in space The first impression is charming. The main menu looks like a western saloon, except outside the window there is space, planets, and a dog floating around in a spacesuit. The music has that little western flavor, the whole setup has a light sci-fi cowboy joke behind it, and it immediately gives the game some personality. But the style is not the main reason LONESTAR works. It is nice, it is funny, it sets the mood, but the real hook is the combat system. This is not just “play attack, play defense” LONESTAR is not a classic deckbuilder where you simply throw out an attack card, then a defense card, then wait for the enemy to do its thing. Cards here are closer to energy values that power the ship. The real build is created through units, slots, colors, ship weight, support modules, attack modules, treasures, overclocks, and the position of everything on your ship. That is where the game becomes interesting. You have different colors of energy, and not every color works in every slot. Some energy is flexible, some is restricted, and once you place it, you cannot just take it back. That one rule changes the whole rhythm of a turn, because every move has weight. A bad click can turn into a wasted turn. A good placement can suddenly unlock a whole chain of damage, defense, or card generation. Then there is ship movement. You can move up or down on the battlefield, but it costs fuel. Sometimes the best move is not dealing more damage. Sometimes it is moving into a better lane, avoiding the worst attack, taking one smaller hit, and preparing a stronger turn later. A deckbuilder that feels like a puzzle engine This is exactly the kind of card-based roguelike that works for me. I like card games, but in traditional competitive card games I rarely enjoy building decks completely from scratch. In games like Hearthstone, I usually prefer learning meta decks, understanding matchups, seeing how the deck works, and figuring out how to counter what other people are playing. But in roguelikes, I am the opposite. I love building something during the run. I love when the game gives me random tools and asks me to turn them into a working machine. Sometimes that machine is elegant. Sometimes it is ridiculous. Sometimes it barely holds together. But when it works, it feels great. In my first LONESTAR run, I leaned into card generation, damage scaling, and one very useful overclock. Without that extra generation, I probably would not have finished the run, because enemies became stronger with every stage. At some point, I was no longer just reacting to enemy attacks. I was trying to build an engine that could survive, scale, and keep producing the resources I needed. Mathematical, but not dry The best thing about LONESTAR is that it is very mathematical without feeling like a spreadsheet. You are constantly asking small questions. Should I block this attack? Should I boost my own damage? Should I move the ship? Should I accept a bit of damage now to prepare something better? Should I risk a weak turn because the next one might explode? And because units, supports, treasures, energy colors, positioning, and overclocks all interact with each other, the game keeps giving you new little problems to solve. One ordinary enemy surprised me a lot. It was basically a survival test. I had two rounds to defeat it, because in the third round it charged up huge attacks. I failed to destroy it in time, but I managed to survive. Then the enemy surrendered. That was a great moment, because victory was not only about reducing a health bar to zero. It was about reading the situation, positioning the ship, minimizing damage, and surviving the exact turn the game wanted me to fear. A useful reset, maybe a little too useful I have mixed feelings about the option to repeat a fight. On one hand, it makes sense. Since placed energy cannot be taken back, one rushed click can ruin your whole plan. In that case, being able to restart the fight feels like a fair safety net, especially in a game where many decisions are very precise. On the other hand, it can be quite strong. Not strong enough to carry a bad build, because if your setup simply does not work, repeating the fight will not magically fix it. But if the problem was execution, order of decisions, or one stupid mistake, the game gives you quite a lot of room to correct it. So I do not hate it. I just think it slightly softens the punishment. Small presentation issues, but good readability Visually, LONESTAR is not amazing, but it does not need to be. The UI is simple, readable, and good at explaining what is happening. The combat screen is clear, tooltips help, and the game does a solid job of teaching its systems step by step. The weakest visual element for me was the energy cards themselves. They are functional, but visually a bit dull. For a game built so heavily around energy, slots, and values, I would not mind stronger visual feedback there. Also, no Polish language version is a minus for me. I know this type of translation is difficult. Strategy games and card games are full of small mechanical details, and one badly translated term can change the meaning of an entire card or perk. But that is also exactly why language matters here. LONESTAR has a lot of descriptions, talents, tooltips, conditions, and small rules. English was not a huge problem for me, but I still prefer playing these games in my native language. It is simply less tiring when the game already asks you to calculate so much. More of these smaller roguelike surprises, please After one completed run, I am very positive. I finished it on my first try, but I would not say the game is automatically easy. I have played a lot of card-based roguelikes, so I know what to look for when building around scaling, generation, and synergies. That experience helped. I can absolutely imagine someone losing the first run if their build does not come together. What I like most is the potential. Different pilots, talents, races, ship layouts, support units, attack units, treasures, stores, event choices, and unlocks make it very easy to imagine many different runs. This is not a huge, flashy game, but mechanically it has a lot to chew on. Recently, smaller roguelike games have been surprising me more and more. As We Descend, Demon Bluff, MEGABONK, and now LONESTAR all remind me that you do not always need a massive production to get a really strong gameplay loop. LONESTAR is simple on the surface, but once the systems start clicking, it becomes a very satisfying little machine. 8/10. Small issues, very strong gameplay. More games like this, please.
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Brandon Parks (@Brandon73563391) reported@Battlefield ******* pathetic *** penny pinching clowns. Run some American servers at 6 am central not all European 200 ping lag trash
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PLA_Overwhelm (@junshiguancha1) reported@alpha_defense Bro, it’s time to retire this aircraft—it’s an embarrassment to India. The return on continued investment is simply too low; if it can crash at an airshow, what kind of survivability could it possibly have on the battlefield?
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RCP (@FlyghtMedic) reported@Battlefield could you guys fix the game instead of “releasing” no ****?
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Burak (@weekendr) reported@BattlefieldComm after the match, quit to menu and boom Black Screen. please fix the problem.
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Pope Puke (@ReligionKills66) reported@MAGAVoice Look at the staggering difference between a true military hero and a total disgrace. Our brave service members look danger in the eye. They are willing to lay down their lives, knowing the rest of our military will die for our country to protect our freedom. They sacrifice everything—their youth, their safety, and their lives—so that we can stand here today. And what do we get on the other side? A cowardly, draft-dodging piece of trash who ran away when his country called. While real heroes were bleeding on the battlefield, he was hiding behind fake excuses and privilege. It is a pathetic, shameful display. It should give you an embarrassment so deep, it leaves a literal tingle in your pants just watching someone act with such total cowardice. We must never confuse the ultimate sacrifice of our military with the absolute disgrace of a coward.. Disgraceful **** Face
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Idris4Peace (@Edrees4P) reportedOver 100 Nigerian soldiers reported missing with service rifles after #ISWAP attack in Borno The Nigerian Army has declared 104 soldiers from the 162 Amphibious Battalion along the Mandara–Buratai Road in Borno State as deserters after they went missing with their service rifles following a deadly attack on their base in early June. On 5 June, insurgents believed to be members of the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) launched a coordinated overnight assault on the military position. According to security sources, the attackers exploited heavy rainfall and poor visibility to penetrate the base. Several soldiers were reportedly killed during the attack, while more than 100 personnel remain unaccounted for. Beyond the immediate battlefield losses, the disappearance of trained soldiers together with their weapons raises serious operational and security concerns for Nigeria’s counterinsurgency campaign in the Lake Chad Basin.
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Global News Wire (@AfolabiI24434) reported@MarioNawfal 🇺🇸🇮🇷 A single U.S. service member killed could be enough to shatter the ceasefire—whether the death was intentional or the result of a battlefield accident. Analyst Stefano Ritondale argues that the key escalation threshold isn't intent, but casualties. In his assessment, once American personnel are killed, pressure for a forceful response rises dramatically, regardless of how the incident occurred. If that analysis proves correct, the current ceasefire rests on a fragile line where one unexpected event could trigger a much broader confrontation. Source: @artoriastech
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BALA (@pestersebester) reported@Battlefield Battlefield 6 is the only game crashing on my PC. RX 6700 XT, clean drivers with DDU, fresh install, overlays disabled, and it still freezes/crashes unless I disable XMP and run DDR5 at stock speed. Fix your stupid *** game.
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medoyid_ua (@LetsArmUKR) reportedLindsey Graham dusting off that sanctions bill again like it's 2022. Cute. But Putin doesn't fear paper. He fears Ukrainian drones turning his logistics into bonfires and his refineries into smoke signals. The only sanctions that land daily are ATACMS, Storm Shadow, and our growing domestic strike range. Moscow loses 35k orcs a month, more than it recruits. Another mobilization wave just speeds up the meat grinder math. Real pressure isn't another dusty draft in DC. It's weapons, licenses for Patriots and Tomahawks, and letting Ukraine finish the job Europe is too scared to do itself. Peace comes when Moscow is broken on the battlefield, not when senators feel productive.
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Kupop0w (@dwise091) reported@_Flamsey I used to play battlefield 1942 of a cd rom on a machine running windows 10 with no problems. If you have a drive and sometimes a bit of patience, you can get just about anything to run.