Battlefield 6 Reviews
Battlefield 6 is more about refinements than surprises, but a well-made Battlefield is automatically one of the best shooters of the year.
All in all, Battlefield 6 feels very much like a game of two parts; the campaign is an exhilarating spectacle that lacks any narrative interest whatsoever, while the multiplayer is just all out chaos is the best way. It will have its learning curve for new players, but DICE certainly has a very good online shooter contender this time around, and it’s something that will keep drawing me back for some time as I attempt to get even remotely passable at it. Hopefully before the next game…
After years of uneven experiments, Battlefield 6 feels like the series has finally remembered what it’s supposed to be. It’s not revolutionary, but it’s confident. The multiplayer is thrilling, stable, and layered with enough systems to keep matches unpredictable and exciting. The campaign looks great, but doesn’t linger; the online requirements and occasional bugs are frustrating but manageable.
With a campaign that stumbles and becomes dispensable, Battlefield 6 shines in its multiplayer and delivers the most fun experience of the year for fans of online shooters.
Review in Portuguese | Read full review
Battlefield 6 doesn't pretend to reinvent the franchise; it simply improves on what was most incredible before. It's a game that listened and understood what we veterans always asked for: epic battles, real destruction, and an intense experience.
Review in Portuguese | Read full review
Battlefield 6 marks a welcome return to modern combat with excellent gunplay and squad-focused multiplayer that recaptures the magic of Battlefield 3 and 4. But a forgettable campaign, sluggish progression, and some frustrating balance issues prevent it from reaching its full potential.
Battlefield 6 isn't a revolution, but it is a clear recovery. DICE has brought the series back to its roots and to what players always wanted: large-scale battles, teamwork, and the return of beloved classes. The single-player is unfortunately very weak and quickly forgotten, but the multiplayer almost makes up for everything. The game is technically stable, plays smoothly, and offers plenty of freedom for the future via the Portal. There are still issues with balance, bugs, and the slow progression system, but the foundation is rock solid. Battlefield 6 finally feels like Battlefield again, and it would be a real shame if this didn't become the shooter of the coming years.
Review in Dutch | Read full review
"The King is Back" Battlefield 6 marks the series' return to its roots after years of floundering. The game combines massive battles, stunning audio, and realistic graphics in a comprehensive shooting experience that restores confidence to the gaming community. Although the story doesn't achieve the expected excellence, the multiplayer mode more than makes up for it. It's an epic cinematic battle that reaffirms the spirit of Battlefield and confirms that the series is still capable of dominating the shooting game scene.
Review in Arabic | Read full review
With well-layered action and dynamic destruction, Battlefield 6’s multiplayer hits in all the places where it counts most. [The campaign is] a safe, dull reimagining of what Battlefield once was, rather than a bold reinvention of what it could be. [OpenCritic note: IGN separately reviewed the multiplayer (8) and singleplayer (5). Their scores have been averaged.]
Battlefield 6 delivers a thrilling multiplayer reset and a decent, if derivative single-player. But it still displays nagging doubts about what makes Battlefield special.
Battlefield 6 is an explosive FPS with adrenaline-fueled multiplayer that is truly Battlefield at its best.
I’ve had such a good time learning the maps, mastering weapons, and discovering quirks of Battlefield 6, and I can’t wait to see how the live-service model rolls out over the next few months. Battlefield 6 is a brilliant time, and one that, for the first time in almost a decade, has a serious chance of rivaling Call of Duty.
The occasional collapsing wall or exploding shack does add some spice.
The latest entry in the Battlefield series is an amalgamation of immersive moments like this. I only wish some of the postwar rewards matched my many acts of valor and that the campaign reflected the grittiness of its multiplayer counterpart. Despite some military blunders, Battlefield 6 has successfully turned the tide.
Battlefield 6 plays it safe but marks a return to form for the long-running series, delivering chaotic, large-scale multiplayer that's as familiar as it is uproariously fun
As it is right now, with the quality and quantity of content in the launch package of Battlefield 6, it is incredibly easy to recommend the game to anyone who enjoys multiplayer shooters. It’s an especially exciting proposition for those of us who just cannot keep up with Call of Duty’s rollerskates-based movement and its instantaneous time-to-kill. There’s finally a compelling middle ground between the indecipherability of tactical shooters and the yearly slop of CoD, and it’s one you won’t have to convince yourself to play simply because it’s there, you’ll do it with a big grin on your face because of how fun it is.
Battlefield 6 doesn't deliver a solid campaign, but it does deliver where it matters most, the gameplay and multiplayer. Finally, all these years later, we can finally say that Battlefield is back.
Battlefield 6 is a return to form for the long-running FPS with traditional classes, restrained maps, and snappy gunplay. It's slightly brought down by a Netflix-style UI and an abysmal single-player campaign, but you're likely playing Battlefield for the multiplayer anyway.
Despite faltering in single-player content and gunplay mechanics, Battlefield 6 finally brings back what made the franchise famous: epic combined arms fun with natural teamwork and a grounded setting. My crystal ball is broken, so I can't say whether it'll sell the lofty 100 million copies expected by the previous EA management, but this feels like a new era for a genre that has been stagnant for far too long. It's not the best shooter ever by any margin, but it is the first Battlefield that is ready to dominate the multiplayer scene after years of Call of Duty tyranny, and I for one welcome our new rulers.