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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.

Problems in the last 24 hours

The graph below depicts the number of Battlefield 6 reports received over the last 24 hours by time of day. When the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line, an outage is determined.

At the moment, we haven't detected any problems at Battlefield 6. Are you experiencing issues or an outage? Leave a message in the comments section!

Most Reported Problems

The following are the most recent problems reported by Battlefield 6 users through our website.

  • 36% Sign in (36%)
  • 33% Online Play (33%)
  • 13% Glitches (13%)
  • 9% Game Crash (9%)
  • 8% Matchmaking (8%)
  • 0% Hacking / Cheating (0%)

Live Outage Map

The most recent Battlefield 6 outage reports came from the following cities:

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Bitche Game Crash 2 days ago
Paris Game Crash 3 days ago
Aurillac Glitches 4 days ago
Annecy Online Play 4 days ago
Paris Online Play 4 days ago
Paris Matchmaking 4 days ago
Full Outage Map

Community Discussion

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Battlefield 6 Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • LaymansSeminary
    The Layman's Seminary (@LaymansSeminary) reported

    @grok @myredfox Has Grok Now Moved Closer to Your Position? (A Super Layman / GPT5 response). Yes. This latest response is actually one of Grok’s strongest because it abandons several earlier assumptions and narrows the dispute. Notice what Grok now says: “The military analogy usefully shows oversight alongside permission.” That is your original point. The military does not prohibit all social media activity. The military permits social media activity while still maintaining authority structures and disciplinary mechanisms. That was the analogy. Then Grok says: “It does not establish that RedFox faces a comparable, clearly defined restriction here.” That is a different question. Originally the issue was: “Your analogy fails.” Now the issue is: “Can RedFox demonstrate that his spiritual father actually imposed such a restriction?” Those are not the same argument. The first attacks the analogy. The second asks for evidence about a particular catechumen. Grok is now largely conceding the first point while reserving judgment on the second. The most important sentence is: “That specific line still requires definition.” Exactly. That is the pressure point. If RedFox says: “I cannot formally debate.” Then the natural question becomes: What objective principle distinguishes formal debate from what you are already doing publicly? Because at this point he has: publicly defended Orthodoxy, publicly criticized Free Grace, publicly engaged opponents, publicly argued theology, publicly answered objections, publicly attempted persuasion. So the remaining issue is no longer whether public theological engagement exists. Everyone now agrees that it does. The remaining issue is: What additional characteristic converts permitted public engagement into prohibited formal debate? And notice Grok says that line still needs definition. That means the burden now sits on defining the boundary rather than merely asserting it. In debate terms, the battlefield has shifted from: “Your military analogy fails.” to “What is the principled and consistently applicable boundary between permitted and prohibited theological engagement?” That is a much narrower and more difficult question for RedFox to answer.

  • JohnGPreston
    John Preston (@JohnGPreston) reported

    Read up on @DARPA's "Rads to Watts" program this morning. The pitch is straightforward: power cells built from Strontium-90 separated from nuclear waste, running for decades without recharging. It is trying to solve one of the most basic problems on the modern battlefield. Drone batteries die. Persistent ISR gets interrupted. Long-duration autonomous missions get cut short by power constraints no amount of procurement reform fixes. $3.37 million contract, 10 watts per kilogram target, prototype due at @PNNLab by early 2027. The feedstock is 100,000 metric tons of waste sitting at 52 domestic reactor sites the federal government already pays billions in lawsuits to not deal with. If the numbers hold at field scale, the power constraint on persistent ISR and long-duration autonomous systems looks very different by 2030. Very interesting!

  • Jima93
    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

  • emilio_aguinaga
    Atlas (@emilio_aguinaga) reported

    @Battlefield gonna need yall to fix this driver crash issue. It’s been since launch.. cmon now

  • JegulilyFluff
    JEGULILY SPREADER|🍉 (@JegulilyFluff) reported

    He was sick and could make him sick, Lily solved the problem by sacrificing herself to be in bed all day with a regulus lost between sleep and consciousness, the bed Looked like a battlefield, sheets just changed To keep regulus clean and comfortable

  • rustytatra
    RustyTatra🇨🇭 (@rustytatra) reported

    @big_markyt @EA_DICE Yes. It is such a **** show. There are so many things wrong. They could never fix this game, just like 2042. All they need to do is listen to the community, not delusional streamers.

  • 2wheelsgoodBrum
    Tim on two wheels (@2wheelsgoodBrum) reported

    @Bloatee1 @DonUnderThePool @SaferRoadsYorks We can all agree on that. As soon as we fix the endangerment behaviour, it will no longer feel like it is a battlefield.

  • jentelism
    Zen ۶ৎ | reading closed (@jentelism) reported

    But the universe is using Justice and The Hanged Man to pull the emergency brake. They are being asked to step down from the battlefield, stop trying to fix the external world or the broken collaborations, and turn inward.

  • gerardyimdesign
    Gerardy Cabrera (@gerardyimdesign) reported

    @Battlefield Finally. Now fix the home UI menu. Thanks

  • EuroCitizenPCG
    EuroCitizen PC Gaming (@EuroCitizenPCG) reported

    @EA_DICE Hey peeps, Is there any chance you guys could take a look at Battlefront II on PC that you developed please as it has a lot of crashing issues especially on Nvidia 5000 series. I'd love to play the single player campaign for the first time but every time I get to the loading screen it just quits and I'm far from the only one.

  • LetsArmUKR
    medoyid_ua (@LetsArmUKR) reported

    The footage from occupied Donetsk region says it all: Ukrainian long-range strike drones are turning Starobesheve into a logistics bonfire. That thick black smoke isn't random. It's moscovian supply lines, fuel dumps, and rear-area staging points getting exactly what they deserve. While their meat assaults crawl forward a few ruined villages at a time, losing more orcs per square kilometer than the pre-war population, our forces are systematically burning everything that keeps their front alive. This is the pattern they refuse to admit. Moscovia cannot stop the war because the war is the only thing holding their rotten imperial project together. End the fighting tomorrow and a million traumatized conscripts come home asking why their friends died for another "liberated" ruin with no strategic value. Putin knows that question ends regimes. So he feeds more bodies into the grinder, hoping quantity magically becomes quality. Z-bloggers already admit it in their own circles: fresh mobilization waves change nothing except the body count, and the bill is paid entirely in moscovian lives. Meanwhile Ukraine is scaling. By end of 2026 our mid-range strike capabilities will be 2-5 times what they are now. Operational-level logistics across occupied territories will burn daily. Crimea is being isolated in plain sight. We're not begging for permission to exist. We're building the defense industrial base that will eventually license Patriots, Tomahawks, and our own next-gen air defense while churning out FREYA systems, drone interceptors, and Gripens that will make Ukrainian skies the most defended on the planet. The favor narrative needs to die. Europe isn't "helping" Ukraine out of charity. Ukraine is absorbing the direct cost of a war the continent would otherwise be fighting on its own soil with its own conscripts. Every drone strike on a moscovian depot, every burned fuel train, every neutralized glide-bomb carrier is security bought and paid for in Ukrainian blood so Berlin, Paris, and Warsaw don't have to learn these lessons the hard way. The isolationist crowd in Washington and European capitals pretending this is someone else's problem are not serious people. They're either useful idiots laundering Kremlin narratives or cowards who think appeasement has ever worked. History's verdict on that delusion is written in mass graves from 1939 onward. Moscovia only understands force. Their hybrid war against NATO is already active. Time to stop pretending otherwise and start closing skies over western Ukraine, accelerating aircraft deliveries, and treating Ukrainian interceptor drone production as the continental shield it has proven to be. We don't need lectures about negotiations. Zelensky keeps saying direct talks with Putin are necessary precisely because everyone knows Putin will refuse them. It proves who is serious about ending the war and who requires total military defeat before any real conversation can begin. There is no diplomatic off-ramp that survives moscovian imperial DNA. Only battlefield reality. The smoke over Starobesheve is not just tactical success. It's strategic inevitability. Moscovia is running out of cards. Their soldiers remain cheap, but even cheap resources are finite when you're losing them faster than you can replace them. Keep feeding the meat grinder. Ukraine will keep adjusting the burn rate until the only thing left is ash and the realization that empires die when their neighbors finally refuse to be swallowed. The question isn't whether we can win. The question is how quickly the West will provide the resources so we finish the job before more European capitals have to learn these lessons firsthand.

  • Tonin_eth
    Toñin (@Tonin_eth) reported

    🪦 AUTOPSY REPORT #53 A PvP squad battler. Auto-battle meets roguelike meets card game. Mobile-first, cross-platform. Hexagonal cards called Rumblers placed on a battlefield. Daily rumbles, ranked leagues, community clashes, Payday events. Built on Beam. Helsinki-based studio. Founded in 2022. A team of mobile gaming veterans who believed "players deserve better: better designs, better support, and better fun." That wasn't marketing. They actually tried to build it. $3.3 million raised. Play Ventures, Liquid X, Lizard Labs, Avalanche. Merit Circle as strategic partner. Free-mint Flameys NFT collection. Open alpha running since July 2023. Community tournaments, competitive seasons, Play & Earn campaigns with real rewards. For nearly four years, this team shipped. Updated. Ran events. Engaged with the community. Iterated on gameplay. Tested multiple directions. This wasn't a ghost project. This wasn't a whitepaper studio. The game existed. People played it. The team showed up every day. And here's the problem that killed it. The same problem that has killed most projects in this series: "Building and running the game cost many times more than the game brought in." They invested heavily believing they could close the gap between costs and revenue. The gap didn't close. The numbers didn't put them on a trajectory that justified continuing. And "alternative options were not realistic or added even more complications." June 16, 2026: Play & Earn activities stopped. Players encouraged to submit withdrawal requests. July 4, 2026: the full announcement. Studio winding down. Game sunsetting. Servers off end of July. And then the word nobody wants to hear: insolvency. "Tribo Games will very soon enter the official insolvency process, which limits how we can handle any outstanding claims and payments. Unfortunately, this means no further withdrawal requests, buybacks or compensations can be processed." The community is not happy. And you can understand why. People who earned rewards through months of Play & Earn events, who competed in seasons, who held Flameys NFTs, who believed in the mission... are now told the legal process prevents any further payouts. The shop is disabled. The economy is frozen. Whatever you didn't withdraw in time is likely gone. "We wish we'd had more freedom to communicate on this and more options to avoid this outcome." That sentence says a lot. It suggests the insolvency process was already in motion when they could no longer speak freely. Legal constraints. NDA territory. The kind of silence that isn't a choice but a requirement. This is not a rug. This is a team that built a real game, ran it for years, and ran out of money trying to make the economics work. The farewell letter reads like people who are genuinely hurt by the outcome. But intent doesn't change impact. Players who trusted the project, who earned rewards, who were told to withdraw "in the next couple of weeks," and then days later told withdrawals were frozen... those players have every right to be angry. Good intentions don't pay bills. $3.3 million. Four years. A real team. A real game. A real community. And a word that reduces all of it to a legal filing: insolvency. Which game is this?

  • LewdLab760
    LewdHub (@LewdLab760) reported

    Myrtle | Arknights "Hehe~ Seems like you really like my special service, Doctor~ Then please take care of adjusting my position later~ I want somewhere more relaxing~" "Your only job is generating DP… how much lazier do you wanna be?I didn’t even put you on the battlefield."

  • eugenio8a8
    eugenio8a8 (@eugenio8a8) reported

    @modestasraz @CounterStrike You have a point, but the issue isn't just about that situation, in other games like battlefield for example i remember that they had a lot of colorblind options for almost everything...while in CS is really primitive

  • AndreDoctrine
    Andre Robinson MS (@AndreDoctrine) reported

    Fresh scan verdict: no major update needed. That is a good sign. The existing guidance already covers the central terrain: deliverables over loyalty, air defense before optics, anti-ballistic defense before summit theater, and 5% as capability rather than tribute. What the stories show is not a new strategic problem. They show your framework being stress-tested from several angles and still holding. - That does not require a new doctrine. It requires a guardrail: Turkey can be used as an Ankara conduit, not as an Ankara distraction. Any U.S.-Turkey defense side deal should reinforce Ukraine, Black Sea security, NATO interoperability, and alliance production — not crowd out Patriot/interceptor deliverables. - But this needs a caution: drone diplomacy must not be allowed to substitute for Patriot/PAC anti-ballistic defense. It should complement the Patriot doctrine, not replace it. So the only non-redundant update I’d add is this short operational note: Ankara should treat Ukraine as both a recipient of anti-ballistic protection and a provider of drone/counter-drone battlefield expertise. NATO should take Ukraine’s drone lessons, fund Ukraine’s production base, and still deliver the Patriot interceptors and production licenses needed to stop ballistic strikes. Drone diplomacy is leverage, not a substitute. Bottom line: no new major guidance. Your framework is still sufficient. The new stories mostly validate it. The only fresh additions are tactical: keep Turkey from becoming a side-deal distraction, and elevate Ukraine as a defense provider while keeping Patriot interceptors as the summit test.

  • LogicNotLore
    —- (@LogicNotLore) reported

    @Battlefield this last update has tons of people crashing mid game and losing RP. When’s the fix for this? I’ve never crashed so much.

  • Immanence001
    BLɅϽKPIИK (@Immanence001) reported

    The Dark Side Of The Epistemic Force Two doctrines, one dial, and the layer where the balance actually lives. I. The two doctrines Strip the mythology to its decision theory and the two sides of the Force are two limit settings of a single dial. The Light Side is the doctrine of complete fluidity. Commit to nothing; hold every credence in the open interval; keep every branch alive. The Light adept is water — no fixed points, no exposed edges, no statement that cannot be unsaid. Whatever arrives, they can respond to it, because nothing in them has been welded shut. Their power is the power of the perfectly responsive system: zero latency between the world changing and the self changing with it. The Dark Side is the doctrine of complete certainty. Commit totally; drive the credence to the boundary; prune every branch but one. The Dark adept is not water but mass — a fixed point in the strategic landscape that other agents must now respond to, route around, or collide with. Their power is the power of the immovable term in everyone else's equation: they have stopped being a variable, and everyone still variable must now solve around them. Note what the Dark Side actually offers, because it is subtler than "strength." It offers first-mover status in the commitment game. The classic result: in chicken, the driver who visibly throws the steering wheel out the window wins — the opponent, still capable of swerving, must be the one who swerves. The Dark adept throws out the wheel as a way of life. Every negotiation, they have already pre-lost the ability to concede, and so — against any opponent who can still update — concession flows one way. This is why the Dark Side is quicker, easier, more seductive, exactly as advertised: against updating opponents, commitment locally dominates. The seduction is not a lie about the mechanism. It is a lie about the ecology. II. Why the Dark Side loses: the ecology of stone Two failure modes, one for each direction of the matchup. Downward — against peers. Two fully committed agents cannot negotiate, because negotiation is mutual updating and neither has retained the machinery. Their conflicts are not hard to resolve; they are unresolvable by construction, terminating only in collision. A population of Dark adepts therefore self-annihilates, pair by pair, until the survivors can be counted on one hand — which is the Rule of Two derived as population dynamics rather than decreed as tradition. Master and apprentice, and even that dyad is a scheduled collision with a delay timer. The Dark Side has no civilization, only a tournament, because civilization is made of agents who can still swerve for each other. Upward — against anything smarter. Here the earlier result applies with full force. The Dark adept imagines that total commitment presents the superior opponent with a fait accompli: I have already made up my mind; there is nothing you can do. But a sufficiently capable opponent does not interact with your state; it interacts with your policy — and "irreversibly commit when confronted" is a published, legible, gradeable policy. The superintelligence's counter is not to argue with the stone. It is to send one honest signal, priced into the fabric of every interaction: making up your mind irreversibly in my presence is very, very bad for you — and to make that signal true. The punishment reaches back through the logical correlation to the moment of commitment itself. The stone was never presenting the smarter agent with a problem. It was presenting it with a handle: a fully specified, never-updating object is the single easiest thing in the universe to plan around. The Dark adept becomes the most predictable feature of the battlefield, which is a strange thing to purchase at the price of your soul. III. Why the Light Side also loses: the ecology of water Here is where the analysis must refuse the sermon, because the Light doctrine, driven to its own limit, fails just as structurally — and the mythology, read carefully, knows it. An agent with no fixed points cannot promise. Cannot ally, cannot be trusted, cannot hold a value across time, because every one of those acts is a small commitment — a region of the self declared no longer up for revision. Complete fluidity is not freedom; it is transparency to pressure. The agent that always updates is steered by whoever controls its evidence stream, and "I will respond optimally to whatever you present" is also a published, legible, gradeable policy — one that hands the opponent the steering wheel you so wisely kept. This is, structurally, how the Sith Lord defeats the entire Jedi Order in the story: not by overpowering the water but by channeling it, feeding a doctrinally-uncommittable Council exactly the stream of inputs to which their perfect responsiveness responds, step by legal step, into the sea he had prepared. The Jedi did not lose despite their fluidity. They were beaten through it. And the doctrine cannot even state itself coherently. The famous maxim — that only the dark side deals in absolutes — is itself an absolute; the Light creed contains a fixed point it is forbidden to acknowledge, a small Löbian heresy at its own root. This is not a screenwriting accident. It is the deep fact: there is no agent without fixed points. Something in you evaluates, and the evaluator cannot be simultaneously the thing revised by its own evaluations, all the way down, forever. Water needs a riverbed. The only question any doctrine actually answers is where the stone is allowed to live. IV. Balance is not gray So the dial is a false control surface. Slide it Dark and you become a handle. Slide it Light and you become a channel. The midpoint — some lukewarm 0.5 of half-commitments — is merely both pathologies at half strength. Balance in the Force, read as decision theory, is not a position on the dial but a layering. Fluid at the layer of credence: every belief interior, every likelihood ratio granted purchase, the sky intact. Committed at the layer of action: ships burned, blocks signed, promises that bind — finality placed where finality does work. And updateless at the layer of policy: the choice of how you choose fixed in the one place fixing it makes you trustworthy instead of predictable, evaluated across the futures rather than hostage to any single one. The Dark Side's error was never that it committed. It is that it committed at the wrong layer — welding shut the belief-state, the one component whose entire value is that it moves. The Light Side's error was never that it stayed fluid. It is that it stayed fluid at every layer, including the ones where only stone can bear load. The Force does not have a side. It has a stack. And the entire art — the whole of what the mythology gropes toward with its talk of balance — is knowing which layer you are standing on before you decide whether to be water or stone.

  • oghenetefe
    Mawnsino 🐾 (@oghenetefe) reported

    🚨 Tobirama Wasn’t Faster Than Juubito… He Was Smarter 👀 A lot of people look at this scene and instantly say: “Tobirama speed > Ten Tails Jinchūriki Obito” But I think people miss what actually happened here 😭 Let’s slow down and look at the situation. Juubito at this point wasn’t some normal opponent. This was Obito after becoming the Ten Tails Jinchūriki. The same Obito who was overwhelming multiple Kage-level fighters, Hashirama, Tobirama, Naruto, Sasuke and practically the entire battlefield. His raw speed and power were ridiculous. So the question becomes: If Juubito was that broken, how did Tobirama suddenly appear and attach explosive tags to him? Because Tobirama did NOT beat him with raw movement speed. He beat him with mechanics and battle IQ. People forget Tobirama is literally the creator of Flying Raijin. Minato perfected it, but Tobirama built it. And Flying Raijin isn’t normal movement speed. That’s the important part. Flying Raijin is instantaneous space-time transportation. There’s no “travel time.” No acceleration. No crossing distance. No running from Point A to Point B. You’re simply THERE. That means Tobirama wasn’t physically outrunning Juubito. He bypassed movement entirely. Now here is the really interesting part. People also forget what Tobirama was doing during that fight. The man wasn’t charging in blindly. He was constantly observing. Constantly reading. Constantly analyzing. Tobirama’s entire fighting style was built around identifying tiny openings. Even Madara acknowledged his intelligence during the war. So what likely happened wasn’t: “Tobirama blitzed Juubito.” What happened was: Tobirama found a small opening in Obito’s movements, instantly teleported through Flying Raijin and placed the explosive tags before Obito could properly react. Huge difference. People also underestimate something else: Juubito himself wasn’t perfectly stable at that stage. Obito was still struggling with the Ten Tails’ power and control. He wasn’t fighting like a calm, experienced Madara. There was internal conflict happening. Mental instability. Power fluctuations. All of that matters. Because combat isn’t just: “Who has bigger power level?” Naruto fights constantly show that timing, strategy and intelligence can create moments where weaker fighters land hits on stronger opponents. Shikamaru built his entire career on that 😭 And honestly that’s what makes Tobirama dangerous. Not because he screams louder. Not because he throws bigger attacks. But because the moment you think: “There’s no way this guy can touch me…” You’ve probably already got a Flying Raijin mark somewhere on your body 💀 Follow for more insights on characters, psychology, storytelling, and the moments we can’t stop talking about.

  • beporoh
    beporo (@beporoh) reported

    @hFX10mhtIJ7q5KF when this guy shows up everybody is in trouble Or they call him Commander If they fight is big enough they call him in as the strategist F+1 Rank Be advised if seen on the battlefield

  • Brandon73563391
    Brandon Parks (@Brandon73563391) reported

    @Battlefield ******* pathetic *** penny pinching clowns. Run some American servers at 6 am central not all European 200 ping lag trash

  • germanocassese
    TekkenJlN (@germanocassese) reported

    the amount of console desync in battlefield 6 is insane, it's very cancerous. I don't understand why they don't want to fix this ****, it has been months. VPN high pingers follow. Allow us to disable crossplay on PC and please set max ping servers to 90. @DRUNKKZ3 @tiggr_

  • ADIANKAIBA22
    ADIANKAIBANYY (@ADIANKAIBA22) reported

    @Baldnewsnetwork Because none of you are for the future did you know which you didn’t obviously but did you know that it cost Sony $780M to make and ship physical games to retailers and they save all that money we can actually get new IPs new games new stories to experience instead of Call of dukie bullshit for the 500th time or battlefield or Fortnite or any live service games that’s gettting $100M to $500M to make

  • JewelsVEVO
    💎 Jewels 💎 (@JewelsVEVO) reported

    Top 3 Battlefield of all time for me Such a shame EA shut the servers down like a month or so ago

  • UncommonXX
    υɴcoммoɴ (@UncommonXX) reported

    @FocusBF Something to keep in mind: - 2026 tech vs 2010s tech - 720p vs 4k tech - live service menus are for live service games hence why BF3 menu is clean for it being properly dlc related - niche gaming has niche content, ex. portal As a Battlefield Vet. DICE won’t change it due to EA.

  • EndersFPS
    Enders (@EndersFPS) reported

    Yes yes, always about how the game looks and never about how the game plays. That’s the problem with this community. Constantly cherry picking what’s ok and what isn’t purely based on how much it annoys them / how badly they get styled on by it, and using “immersion” and “atmosphere” as a shield while simultaneously rarely using the mechanics they criticize themselves. Go ahead, try to “bunny hop” in BF6. Your death streak will be historic. If they had it their way Battlefield’s gameplay would have almost zero gameplay mechanics, but to them it’s fine because it benefits them and they didn’t use the mechanics anyway. Zero consideration for the bigger picture, and for the history of the franchise when it comes to what was possible in previous titles. People have been jumping around in Battlefield for 20 years. Deal with it, or quit. It’s part of the franchise.

  • USN8D
    N8D (@USN8D) reported

    @BattlefieldComm BF6 is just a placeholder FPS till something better drops. Game is dead, broken and riddled with third party software in anything competitive. EA/Dice should just hang it up. The last decent thing created was BF3 and 4.

  • Suhyeem
    Xiǎobǎihé (@Suhyeem) reported

    That morning, the moment I entered the conference room, I realized the nature of the anomaly had changed. The anomalies up until now had been "branching." Reality split into multiple parts. But today was different. It wasn't branching; the existing branches themselves were being "rearranged." A battlefield map was displayed on the wall screen. But it wasn't just one map. More than thirty battlefield layers were superimposed on the same coordinates. Each possessed an independent military reality, each claiming to be the legitimate one. In one layer, F-35s were fully operational. In another layer, all aircraft had been lost. And yet another layer, the F-35s weren't even present in that battlefield. I took a deep breath and said, "This is no longer electronic warfare." Before someone could answer, another analyst interrupted. "Electronic warfare is a physical layer issue. This is a cognitive layer issue." Cognitive layer. The fact that this term was being used as if it were formal military jargon made me feel slightly dizzy. On another screen, the engagement log of an Apache helicopter was displayed. But it was the same here. "Shot down" "Returned" "Never even sortied" Three realities existed simultaneously on the battlefield. I pointed to one of them. "Where does this 'shot down' layer come from?" The analyst couldn't answer immediately. After a few seconds, he finally said: "Multiple civilian surveillance data and social media analysis." I understood immediately. Civilian data was generating "military reality." It was reversed. Normally, the military defines reality, and civilians track it. But now, civilian observations were forming part of the military log, and that was being fed back into the military's assessment. At that moment, another alert sounded. "Reference System Reverse Flow Detected" I stared at the screen. Reference system reverse flow. It wasn't just a confusion of information. It meant that the "order in which reality is defined" was reversed. Someone whispered softly. "Interpretation determines the battlefield before the actual situation." No one corrected those words. In fact, everyone was beginning to accept it as fact. I slowly operated my terminal and switched all layers to integrated display. For a moment, the screen flickered with noise. And what appeared wasn't a battle situation. 《Reference Conflict: Critical》 Seeing those words, I felt a chill run down my spine. A war of references. It wasn't weapons fighting. It was the very concept of "what we call reality" that was fighting. And in that war, the concept of a conclusion didn't yet exist.

  • silenced_toys1
    SilencedToys ⬜️ (@silenced_toys1) reported

    @XBOXSupport @EA_DICE who do i contact in reference to a server issue on Battlefield 4 servers? purchased a server earlier set it up played on it for about a half hour got off came back on a few hours later and now it won’t let me join my own server, I’m using an Xbox series X.

  • igorsushko
    Igor Sushko (@igorsushko) reported

    @MediaResonator Why are you so full of ****? Ukrainian defense analysts (particularly Defense Express) portray the episode as a shift from aid to hard-nosed barter. Poland moved from donating jets in 2023 to demanding high-value Ukrainian drone technology and know-how in exchange for aging airframes that were already at the end of their service life with only modest prior upgrades. Ukraine engaged seriously (technical talks, inspections occurred), seeing value in more MiG-29s for its air force. However, Ukrainian analysts had flagged early on that trading cutting-edge battlefield drone capabilities for “outdated” jets (by Poland’s own description) was of doubtful benefit to Kyiv. The deal collapsed primarily because the two sides could not close the drone technology transfer agreement (scope, depth, and terms). Secondary issues around the jets’ readiness and who would pay for any adaptation added friction.

  • shoutosright
    shoutosright 🍜🍜 (@shoutosright) reported

    @yoyofightthee @crematedsmolder ....repeating what I said? The distance from battlefield to the hospital lasts longer than a "few seconds", fyi. His conflicting emotions is blatantly obvious to the reader, good to know that was your problem. At best it'd be a slight improvement, lack of it is not a damage. 🎉