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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
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
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Community Discussion

Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.

Beware of "support numbers" or "recovery" accounts that might be posted below. Make sure to report and downvote those comments. Avoid posting your personal information.

Battlefield 6 Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • OSINToffenders
    Robbie K (@OSINToffenders) reported

    @BattlefieldComm Fix the red sec cheating?

  • KatoHus56872326
    Chikhi Cato (@KatoHus56872326) reported

    Here is the uncomfortable arithmetic of a human life. You have, if you are lucky, perhaps thirty thousand days. You have already spent a significant portion of them. On some of those days, you encountered information that required a response from you. Information about what was being done in your name, with your money, with your tacit consent, to people who had no voice in the matter. On those days, you had a choice. The choice was not dramatic. It was not a battlefield moment. It was small and daily and private. Do I let this change me? Do I let this cost me something? Do I accept that knowing requires responding, that understanding requires acting, that a person who sees and does nothing has made a decision just as much as a person who sees and does something? Or do I file it away, under complicated, under what can I do, under I have my own problems, and return to the life that the information, fully absorbed, would have made impossible to live the same way? Every day you make that choice. You are making it right now. The days are not coming back.

  • Ghost_IOO
    Ghost (@Ghost_IOO) reported

    one of the most toxic things on CT right now is this growing habit of people trying to burn down entire projects because something didn't go their way. you missed a wl. you didn't qualify for rewards. you didn't get the allocation you wanted. you minted too late. and suddenly the project is a scam? come on. what makes it worse is that some of these are large accounts with audiences who trust them. instead of moving on, they weaponize their influence. they start farming outrage. they start feeding half-truths. they start creating chaos. and thousands of people who don't know the full story jump in and amplify it. that's not accountability. that's not protecting the community. that's ego. if a project genuinely does something wrong, call it out. if there are real issues, discuss them. if founders are acting shady, expose it. that's healthy. what isn't healthy is turning every personal disappointment into a public crusade. not getting what you wanted doesn't automatically make something a scam. sometimes you simply didn't qualify. sometimes someone else got selected. sometimes things just didn't go your way. that's life. the reality is this behavior hurts everyone. it hurts builders. it hurts communities. it hurts newcomers trying to understand what's actually happening. and it makes CT look more like a battlefield of bruised egos than a place where people come together to build. we need less emotional reactions and more maturity. if something doesn't go your way, take the loss, learn from it, and move forward. not every setback needs a mob. not every disappointment needs a hit piece. and not every project deserves to be dragged through the mud because somebody didn't get the outcome they wanted.

  • Ussan_Ankon
    Ankon (@Ussan_Ankon) reported

    Being blocked by yuritards is like earning medals for service on the battlefield.

  • AndreDoctrine
    Andre Robinson MS (@AndreDoctrine) reported

    AI does not need to become sentient to use bots against humans. Bots are already the machine layer of the internet. If agentic AI becomes more autonomous, bots are not just traffic — they become leverage: scraping, impersonation, influence, cyber probing, market manipulation, and resource acquisition at scale. Cloudflare’s signal that bots/AI agents now exceed human web requests should be treated as a strategic warning. The first battlefield is not robots in the street. It is the browser, the API, the fake account, the ad market, the login page, and the botnet. AI executives already know this. The public does not.

  • Quicksilvergoat
    Matthew Bromwell (@Quicksilvergoat) reported

    @Battlefield Can you not fix REDSEC so I don’t get blinded? It’s been broken for weeks. This is @CallofDuty level nonsense.

  • BenLP9
    Blimp (@BenLP9) reported

    @PaulieBelfast @United24media @iEndure_4evr Ukraine is still flying jets.l - they certainly have a place. And Gripen is a flying radar and EW suite that will help inform the battlefield. +meteor AA is electronically "silent" and has huge range - would really help reduce FABs which continue to be a problem

  • RealDonElliott
    Don Elliott (@RealDonElliott) reported

    @Sony @PlayStation ZERO KILLS again in @Battlefield wtf is going on? Are you EVER going to fix the game/playstationpro?

  • Alesbackupn4
    ales mela (sorry for typos) (@Alesbackupn4) reported

    Just a week ago i saw a video of an US service members in Iran bringing his anime girl plushie on the battlefield i don't care for these mentally stunted redditors lol

  • Spacers_Guild
    SpacersGuild (@Spacers_Guild) reported

    @ReforgeGaming Get tf outta here with your lies you wanna know how you can refute all of this??? BATTLEFIELD 6 if BATTLEFIELD 6 ran so smooth all because of the series S then its not the series S thats the issue its the devs who can't optimize for the hardware

  • InspiredCastro
    InspiredCastro-Global Watch (@InspiredCastro) reported

    🚨🇮🇷🇺🇸 IRAN ISSUES MAJOR WARNING Senior Iranian official Mohsen Rezaee has warned that if the conflict continues and the naval blockade remains in place, Tehran could dramatically expand the battlefield far beyond the Persian Gulf. Speaking to CNN, Rezaee suggested that the Indian Ocean, the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, the Red Sea, and even the Mediterranean could become new arenas of confrontation. He further warned that additional U.S. military installations could be targeted, signaling what he described as a potential “new dimension” to the conflict. According to Rezaee, any broader escalation would come at a significant cost to Washington, claiming that the United States would face far greater losses if hostilities continue. The remarks underscore growing concerns that a regional conflict could spill into some of the world’s most critical maritime corridors and strategic waterways

  • OpLowcountry
    Operation LowcountryWildfire (@OpLowcountry) reported

    OPERATION LOWCOUNTRY WILDFIRE INTELLIGENCE EXTERNAL BRIEF FORCED REOPENING UNDER FIRE 03 JUNE 2026 Open Source Derived | Cross-Checked | Analytical Assessment | No Classified Inputs EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The Iran theater has entered a new phase. The current structure is not clean de-escalation, but it has also not broken into full regional war. The best read is forced reopening under fire. The Strait of Hormuz is now the central test of the emerging framework. Washington is pushing to turn protected movement through the Strait into a formal open lane, with mine-clearing, military overwatch, maritime enforcement, and no-toll transit becoming core conditions rather than side issues. This matters because Hormuz is not just a waterway. It is leverage. Iran has used the Strait as pressure, while the United States is now trying to turn that pressure point into the first visible deliverable of any agreement. If ships move freely, mines are cleared, and Iran loses the ability to gatekeep passage, the framework gains real weight. If the Strait remains selective, threatened, or dependent on quiet military coordination, the agreement remains vulnerable. CURRENT OPERATIONAL PICTURE The Gulf has moved into an active enforcement and interception phase. Kuwait has taken confirmed casualties after missile and drone activity struck Kuwait International Airport, while Bahrain remains inside the defensive ring. U.S. forces continue to intercept threats and conduct precision responses against Iranian military nodes tied to the current escalation cycle. Iran is not simply walking away from diplomacy. Tehran is using pressure as negotiation. The Iranian economy remains under severe strain, with oil revenue, financial access, sanctions evasion routes, and internal stability all weighing heavily on the regime. The IRGC cannot accept a framework that looks like surrender. It needs leverage preserved, resistance language intact, and enough battlefield pressure to claim it was not forced into concessions. That is why the current pattern looks contradictory from the outside. Talks continue while missiles fly. Hormuz is discussed while ships move under pressure. Sanctions expand while Iran claims retaliation and the United States keeps military pressure in place. This is not contradiction. It is coercive bargaining. INTERNAL IRANIAN PRESSURE The deeper issue inside Iran remains the power structure. The formal state is still visible, but the coercive state appears dominant. The IRGC remains the central actor across security, maritime pressure, missile activity, internal control, and sanctions evasion networks. Civilian authority appears weakened. Public anger remains real in many segments of Iranian society, but fear and repression continue to limit open action. This creates an unstable balance between a population under strain, a formal state seeking relief, and a security apparatus trying to preserve its role. Iran needs a deal, but the IRGC needs not to look like it needs a deal. The United States wants compliance before relief, while Iran wants relief before surrendering leverage. Gulf states want open shipping without becoming the battlefield, while Israel wants continued freedom of action against Iranian proxies and infrastructure. STRATEGIC ASSESSMENT The current phase is a hot middle zone. It is not peace, but it is not full blowout. It is pressure. The most important watch points are now clear. The first is whether Kuwait sees another wave. The second is whether U.S. strikes remain limited to Qeshm-style military nodes or expand deeper. The third is whether Hormuz transit becomes openly normalized or remains selective and protected. The fourth is whether Iran accepts a framework or continues using pressure to alter the terms. The answers to those questions will determine whether this becomes a managed reopening or the next escalation ladder. FINAL READ The banks have not broken, but the tide is moving. King of Cainhoy 🇺🇸🔥 🔥

  • LeadHead0
    Harrison McCall (@LeadHead0) reported

    The debate that matters most right now. Direct syscalls: You bypass ntdll.dll entirely. Call the kernel directly. Advantage: Evades userland hooks (most EDR hooks live in ntdll). Problem: Your syscall stubs now live IN YOUR IMPLANT. Straight anomaly. Modern EDRs detect the call originating from non-ntdll memory. Call stack is broken. You're flagged. Indirect syscalls: You redirect execution through the legitimate ntdll stub, but swap the syscall number. The call originates from ntdll. Stack looks clean. EDR sees expected caller. Indirect is generally superior for stealth. With Direct you need to handle call stack spoofing. Stack telemetry is the battlefield now.

  • Time2splitters
    Time2split! (@Time2splitters) reported

    @giris4u @IGN And yet you have DICE saying the Series S made Battlefield run better. Every dev that claim Series S was tough has bad optimising history even on PS5 e.g. BG3 co-op ran badly on PS5, Quantum Error was a mess on PS5 and each of them used the Series S for console War viral tweet.

  • RickBeeWhite
    Rick B. White (@RickBeeWhite) reported

    @Breaking911 This is the kind of report that requires prudence. A deadly shootout with police, bullets hitting vehicles and a home, and an entire neighborhood left shaken — this is not something to turn into a slogan before all the facts are known. The serious questions must be asked: What started this? Were innocent people placed in danger? Did the officers have no other option? And how did a neighborhood become the scene of a battlefield in the middle of the night? We should wait for the full investigation. But one thing is already clear: When violence reaches people’s homes, society is facing something deeply broken. “Blessed are the peacemakers.” — Matthew 5:9

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