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Battlefield 6

Battlefield 6 status: server issues and outage reports

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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.

  • 38% Sign in (38%)
  • 33% Online Play (33%)
  • 13% Glitches (13%)
  • 8% Game Crash (8%)
  • 7% Matchmaking (7%)
  • 0% Hacking / Cheating (0%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Angoulême Glitches 13 hours ago
Nice Online Play 4 days ago
Pessac Sign in 6 days ago
Marseille Sign in 6 days ago
Pont-Scorff Online Play 6 days ago
Haguenau Online Play 6 days ago
Full Outage Map

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:

  • GoldenWriggles
    Wriggles (@GoldenWriggles) reported

    @Pirat_Nation Latest AMD drivers have loads of issues with Battlefield 6, Sticking to the older set till it gets removed from the release notes.

  • Mike_2471
    Mike (@Mike_2471) reported

    @BFBulletin Don't worry about it battlefield unistalled the game solved my issues with the game

  • Rocinantemoons
    before i slip,, ima slide♟️📜 (@Rocinantemoons) reported

    @Battlefield fck off if u not fixing server issue in ME

  • neo_baggins
    Neo Baggins (@neo_baggins) reported

    @BattlefieldInte The new update is such trash. The UI is still broken, but now also broken in new ways. The eternal orange dots are back, their new ‘mark all read’ button doesn’t work, the ‘don’t show again’ check box in the ‘mark all read’ button doesn’t work. Every single time I boot the game, or return to main menu, the battlefield pro preorder unskippable animation plays for 15 seconds. In game on PS5 at least, balance is retarded, I joined a match midway, my team winning handily, all of a sudden we start to lose. I check the scoreboard and it’s 24 vs 32. My team lost to the enemy holding all points. Switched over to casual breakthrough as a palate cleanser, but the new damage reductions just mean it’s clear which players are using Cronus zen or other aim bots. One team will have respectable K/Ds around between 1 and 2 or 3, then the top players on the other team will all be at 30, 40 kills and ZERO deaths. And be playing with SMGs, not sitting back sniping bots. Cheating is the only way I can explain people getting high double digit undefined K/Ds. The only time I’ve gotten an undefined K/D was in a vehicle against a team that didn’t play engineers, and when I was sniping for a weekly challenge. At this point I finished the battle pass, I might muscle through the challenges for the bot arm melee weapon, but I’m not buying Pro next season, I will give it a chance because the maps look interesting, but if it’s like this, I’m uninstalling.

  • __abioye_
    Pọ́ọ̀lù (@__abioye_) reported

    @WorldCupMedia That Canada vs. Qatar match was painful to watch—truly painful. Let's hope Ismail Koné is not badly injured, because that pitch was a battlefield of bad decisions and broken rhythm. The game was so poor, Qatar made Canada look like a Premier League side. Let that sink in. Absolutely amazing—and not in a good way.

  • ErisQT
    ErisQT 💜 Hiatus (@ErisQT) reported

    hey @EA @awscloud @EA_DICE fix your servers for dallas I'm having 80 latency

  • FlacoG_2023
    Libertad_24 (@FlacoG_2023) reported

    @GrimBF6 @Millitings @BattlefieldComm "Buddy," how many more months do they need to fix this? Are they waiting for MW4 to come out and there will only be 2000 people left...? "We are working." Game from 2025...

  • snipermomo_1994
    Mo.aly (@snipermomo_1994) reported

    @BattlefieldComm Plz, Recon class in Redsec solos is broken. at least Try to limit the number of usages of the drone. Make it limited to 3 times during the whole match.

  • lal_shiban
    Shiban Lal Pandita (@lal_shiban) reported

    @MarkhorSindh "Issue will be settled in battlefield " That's what Bilawal Bhutto is saying. He talks sense. If America can travel 11000 kms to bomb Iran why can't Pakistan do it?

  • ChrisSlaske
    chris (@ChrisSlaske) reported

    @BattlefieldComm Remove ranked. Give every squad size for red sec. Casual better be whatever squad size we want. You removed working initiation for graphic lighting glitchfest in redsec you cant even patch a fix. Great job giving recon even more bullshit for redsec. Infantry conquest, not oblit

  • jessewllc20222
    Jesse (@jessewllc20222) reported

    @kst0ne13 @BattlefieldComm I can get in matches but I get kicked in the middle of the match for inactivity even though I am actively playing the issue is 100% on the battlefield server side. I have reported it tagged them in posts on their social medias I dunno when ******** they are gonna address it.

  • ALAUDDINSHAHED
    talkingINTROVERT (@ALAUDDINSHAHED) reported

    @BattlefieldComm pls give us strike point back! why is this taking so long for the fix????

  • FabianSchu96203
    Gatzestreicheln (@FabianSchu96203) reported

    @BattlefieldComm Holy **** now even your ingame shop in console is broken because you can’t choose a different row in one section in the shop at least on console You have to a special kind of trash to **** up in ingame shop

  • nkabardin
    Nikita Kabardin (@nkabardin) reported

    @langfuse It looked like a standard UI problem. How hard can it be? I've built filter UIs before (TV schedules, internal tools, a Battlefield server browser...), all with a fixed set of parameters.

  • tanpukunokami
    NyanChuu🔮🇯🇵🍭 (@tanpukunokami) reported

    The Egg Command System I ordered breakfast in America. Simple. Toast. Bacon. Eggs. Peace. Then the waitress looked at me and asked, “How do you want your eggs?” I froze. How. Do I want. My eggs. In Japan, eggs usually arrive with a plan. In America, the egg waits for your leadership. I said, “Cooked.” She smiled. “What kind?” Kind? There were kinds? She began listing them. “Sunny side up, over easy, over medium, over hard, scrambled, poached…” I stopped hearing words. I heard military ranks. Sunny Side Up sounded optimistic. Over Easy sounded suspiciously injured. Over Medium sounded like a compromise made by tired diplomats. Over Hard sounded like the egg had survived prison. Scrambled sounded like the egg lost the war. Poached sounded illegal. I asked, “Which one is safest?” The waitress said, “Safe?” A man at the next table said, “Just get scrambled, bro.” Just get scrambled. America always says “just” before asking you to surrender your dignity. I looked at him. “I will not choose cowardice without understanding the battlefield.” He nodded slowly and returned to his coffee. The waitress waited. Patient. Powerful. She had guided many men through egg panic. I pointed at the menu. “What is sunny side up?” She said, “Yolk up.” “What is over easy?” “Flipped. Runny yolk.” “What is over hard?” “Flipped. Cooked all the way.” So the egg could be exposed. Turned over. Wounded. Hardened. Broken. Or scrambled beyond recognition. This was not breakfast. This was an egg career path. I finally said, “Over easy.” The waitress wrote it down. No ceremony. No bell. Just ink on paper. A decision had been made about the soul of an egg. When the plate arrived, the eggs looked calm. Too calm. White body. Yellow center. Soft. Dangerous. I touched the yolk with a fork. It broke immediately. Golden liquid spread across the plate. I whispered, “I have released the sun.” The man next to me said, “That’s the best part.” Of course. America does not fear the broken yolk. America puts toast in it. I tried. The toast entered the golden flood. My brain objected. My mouth promoted the idea. By the second bite, I understood. In America, an egg is not cooked. It is negotiated. By the third bite, I was no longer afraid. I had chosen over easy. The egg had accepted me. Next time, I may attempt over medium. Not because I am ready. Because a warrior must continue his studies in breakfast warfare.

  • weekendr
    Burak (@weekendr) reported

    @Millitings @BattlefieldComm We need to wait at least 4 more years to fix netcode hit reg and console players desync problems against PC players.

  • trek_official
    TREK (@trek_official) reported

    What if I told you that the same psychological trick that sold millions of pet rocks in 1975 is now silently driving trillion-dollar market bubbles today? Back then, entrepreneurs turned a meaningless object into a must-have toy by tapping into something primal: our need to justify our choices. Fast forward to Wall Street, and you'll see the same forces at play, but with billions on the line. 1. THE ORIGIN In 1957, social psychologist Leon Festinger and his team infiltrated a small doomsday cult led by a woman named Dorothy Martin. The group believed that on December 21, they'd be rescued by aliens, but only if they were pure. Festinger predicted that when the prophecy failed, the cult would collapse. Instead, something fascinating happened. Members who had given away their possessions and quit jobs didn't abandon the belief. They doubled down, claiming their faith had saved the world from disaster. Festinger published his findings in "When Prophecy Fails," coining the term cognitive dissonance. It's the mental discomfort we feel when our actions or beliefs conflict with new evidence, and our brains will twist reality to avoid that pain. 2. THE MECHANISM Let's break it down with a simple market scenario. You research a company, read bullish reports, and buy 100 shares at $50. A month later, bad earnings hit, and the stock plummets to $30. Now, you face a dilemma: either admit you misjudged the investment (which hurts your ego) or find reasons to hold. Suddenly, you're scouring forums for positive news, downplaying risks, and telling yourself, "It's a long-term play." That's dissonance resolution in real-time. You're not changing your position; you're changing your narrative to align with your decision. This isn't just individual—it's collective. When enough investors do this, entire markets can detach from fundamentals. 3. THE MARKET TWIST Historically, this has led to some spectacular blowups. Take the dot-com bubble of the late 1990s. Investors poured money into unprofitable internet companies, convinced that "the new economy" defied old rules. When profits never materialized, dissonance kept them holding. CEOs justified burn rates with buzzwords, and analysts looked the other way. The crash in 2000 wiped out trillions, but the dissonance didn't stop there. Many refused to sell, hoping for a rebound, which delayed recovery. Contrast that with the 2008 housing crisis: mortgage-backed securities were rated safe, but when housing prices fell, the system crumbled because everyone—from banks to homeowners—had rationalized away the risk. 4. THE MARKETING PLAYBOOK Marketers have long exploited this. Consider how Apple launched the iPod in 2001. They didn't just sell a device; they sold a lifestyle. The ad campaign with silhouettes dancing to music created a desire to belong. If you didn't have an iPod, you felt left out—dissonance between your self-image and the cultural norm. Resolution? Buy one. In markets, this scales up. During the crypto boom of 2017, ICOs (Initial Coin Offerings) promised revolution. Investors faced dissonance: the fear of missing out on the next Bitcoin versus the risk of losing money. Influencers amplified the narrative, creating FOMO that overrode caution. It's not just about the product; it's about resolving the conflict between aspiration and action. 5. THE CRASH Fast-forward to January 2021, and GameStop becomes a battlefield. Retail traders on Reddit's WallStreetBets bought shares to squeeze short-selling hedge funds. When the stock soared to $483, many felt vindicated. But as it fell back, dissonance kicked in. Instead of taking profits, they held on, chanting "diamond hands." Why? Selling would mean admitting the squeeze was over, which clashed with their identity as savvy investors fighting the establishment. The dissonance fueled a narrative of resistance, turning a financial event into a social movement. Even as losses mounted, the belief in the cause persisted—a modern echo of Festinger's cult. 6. THE MODERN-DAY CONUNDRUM Today, social media acts as a dissonance amplifier. Platforms like Twitter and TikTok create echo chambers where beliefs are reinforced by likes and retweets. When Elon Musk tweets about Dogecoin, enthusiasts ignore regulatory warnings or technical flaws, doubling down on their investments. This collective rationalization can inflate bubbles beyond what traditional models predict. It's not just about information asymmetry; it's about psychological reinforcement at scale. And with algorithm-driven content, we're often fed more of what we already believe, making dissonance harder to break. 7. CONCLUSION source @trek_official

  • TwoBabyBlues
    𝒮𝒜𝒯𝒪ℛ𝒰 𝒢𝒪𝒥𝒪 五条 悟 (@TwoBabyBlues) reported

    ( For a moment, there was only light... ) ( Then the world came back all at once. Salt in the air. Waves crashing nearby. Armoured soldiers moving across the beach like ants stirred from a broken nest. The distant sound of battle rolled over the coastline, sharp enough to ruin what might have otherwise been a pretty view... ) ( Satoru stood there in the sand, one hand tucked into his pocket, his white hair shifting lightly with the sea breeze as he slowly looked around. ) ( Definitely not Tokyo... ) ( Definitely not anywhere he remembered agreeing to visit either... ) 𝕾𝖆𝖙𝖔𝖗𝖚 𝕲𝖔𝖏𝖔: “ Well... ” ( His head tilted slightly, gaze moving from the swarming soldiers to the strange coastline beyond them... ) “ This is either the worst vacation package ever... or I missed a very important invitation. ” ( Despite the chaos, he didn’t move with panic. If anything, he seemed far too relaxed for someone standing near a battlefield he had no explanation for. ) ( Still... his attention sharpened when he felt it. A presence nearby that didn’t quite blend with the rest of the noise. ) “ Guess sightseeing can wait... ” ( A small grin tugged at his mouth as he turned toward the source of that presence, voice carrying just enough to be heard over the waves... ) “ Hey... whoever’s running this beach party, mind telling me where I just landed...? ”

  • stevo3854420
    Stevo3854 (@stevo3854420) reported

    @BattlefieldComm I hope you guys realize your expiration date is Oct when cod mw4 releases unless you fix the insane amount of issues that persistently plague this broken game and it's absolutely stupid ranked scoring system and squad rules.

  • lcbchefperry
    Michael E. Perry (@lcbchefperry) reported

    @Primary_Pianist The Book of Mormon describes whole peoples, cities, buildings, wars, kings, prophets, temples, records, armies, weapons, and massive battles. Mormon 1 says the land was covered with buildings and the people were almost as numerous as the sand of the sea. Mormon 6 describes roughly 230,000 Nephites killed at Cumorah. Ether 15 describes nearly two million Jaredite “mighty men” killed, plus wives and children. Imagine someone claimed that an ancient Israelite civilization existed somewhere in North America. Not a tiny campsite. Not one immigrant family. A real civilization. Imagine it had a final battle where the dead were roughly the size of Irving, Texas population 238K. Then imagine another earlier civilization in the same sacred history lost a male fighting population roughly the size of Houston 2.4M, plus women and children. Now imagine this civilization supposedly had cities, temples, written records, named places, religious systems, kings, trade, weapons, metalwork, and centuries of history. Then ask: Would it be plausible for a civilization of that size and complexity to vanish with no confirmed city, no confirmed inscription, no confirmed Hebrew or Egyptian writing, no confirmed Nephite place name, no confirmed Israelite temple, no confirmed Book of Mormon battlefield, no confirmed “reformed Egyptian,” and no material culture that clearly identifies it? That is the issue. A small family can disappear genetically. A civilization of that scale should not disappear historically, archaeologically, linguistically, and materially. So the problem is not merely DNA. DNA is one missing footprint. But the larger issue is that almost every expected footprint is missing. At some point, “the evidence disappeared” stops being an explanation and starts becoming a shield against testing the claim.

  • 4Thund3r
    Thund3r 4 (@4Thund3r) reported

    @BattlefieldComm The hitreg and desync issues between platforms should be immediate priority over any of this.

  • elhigadodmarita
    Mαr Mounier 🌐 (@elhigadodmarita) reported

    @mhfmvc Dear brother, I deeply appreciate the candor of your analysis. You present a position of impeccable logical rigor within a closed system, yet you commit the very error of those you criticize: you reduce the Mystical Body of Christ to an administrative problem to be solved at a desk. You employ the sedevacantist thesis to denounce the ‘inconsistency’ of others, but to what does your position lead in practice? To a total atomization where every believer becomes their own Pope, awaiting a restoration that, by your own premise, is humanly impossible. Absolute sedevacantism ultimately manifests as a form of quietism: since you posit that there is no authority, there is no mission, and therefore nothing to do but await the apocalypse from the comfort of one’s home. And that is the very triumph of the ‘sect’ you so adamantly oppose! They need not persecute you if you have already excluded yourself from the combat. Furthermore, you accuse me of caring only for ‘externals’ rather than doctrine. On the contrary: precisely because I am concerned for doctrine, I understand that the Church is NOT a corporation whose legal validity is automatically annulled by the errors of its managers. Remember that the history of the Church is a record ad infinitum of Popes who have been weak, erratic, or deeply questionable, without that signifying that the Holy Spirit has abandoned the sacraments or the apostolic succession. The fact that you require the entire ‘protocol’ of history to be flawless to believe in the validity of the hierarchy reveals that your faith depends on bureaucratic perfection, not on divine Providence. Then, you criticize the SSPX for its ‘inconsistency,’ yet in practice, they are the rearguard trench of a war you have already declared lost. Is the SSPX position perfect? No. But the ‘purity of doctrine’ you demand is, at this historical juncture, a LUXURY that does not permit the building of a single chapel, the formation of a single priest, the protection of the Tridentine Mass, or the salvation of a single soul from destruction. The SSPX, conversely, for all its limitations, is fighting the war, taking bullets, missiles, and bombs. They remain in the field because they know that the General on the line is CHRIST and the fortress to be defended is HOLY. Finally, you argue that it is ‘utterly inconsistent’ to recognize the Pope while rejecting the Council. Brother, it is entirely Catholic to acknowledge the historical facts-that Rome is occupied by an anti-theology-and, simultaneously, to maintain that Christ has not abandoned His Sacred Spouse, but has allowed a trial of purification where Tradition remains the only guiding thread. Do you prefer the theoretical purity of self-destruction? So be it. I prefer the resistance in the trenches, with all its wounds, abuse, suffering, and contradictions, for as long as the occupation lasts. But we must not leave the enemies of the Church an easy path. Remember: being Catholic is NOT for the cowardly. To be a militant Catholic, one MUST BE BRAVE. I understand your position perfectly, but we have been pushed into a FRONTAL war, and doctrinal purity is useless if it merely becomes a shroud to bury the cause of Christ. The ‘inconsistency’ of which you accuse me is not a weakness; it is my refusal to let the enemy dictate the rules of my own surrender. No. If the Church is to be defended, we must step directly onto the battlefield. And we do not care about appearing with pressed and perfumed uniforms. All we care is: we are under fire, and we MUST save lives—and souls. Even if there are only twelve of us.

  • rahulexmajor
    RAHUL SINGH, EX-MAJOR Indian Army (@rahulexmajor) reported

    @SamSiff Before passing judgment, it is worth asking a simple question: do we actually know the facts? A social media graphic and a viral caption are not evidence. They rarely provide the full context of family circumstances, legal entitlements, personal relationships or events surrounding a death. If the officer's wife received financial benefits, that does not automatically establish greed. In law and policy, next of kin are entitled to compensation, pensions and other benefits precisely because the service member made the ultimate sacrifice. More importantly, using one unverified or isolated case to make sweeping claims about women, wives or military families is neither fair nor rational. The real tragedy here is the loss of a young officer who gave his life in service. That should remain the focus. A martyr deserves remembrance for his sacrifice, not for social media turning his family's private circumstances into a battlefield for ideological arguments. Facts first. Outrage later.

  • mastersabin
    Sabin (@mastersabin) reported

    @Battlefield fix your ******* game, we don't care about maps where we will not see ****

  • IdleMindl4qg
    NodeAspect (@IdleMindl4qg) reported

    @Battlefield The game is broken, buggy, and has lost the identity of what BF is supposed to be, It's so incredibly unbalanced, and we can clearly tell that you can't sort out all the problems.

  • PardonMyMess
    Pardon My Mess (@PardonMyMess) reported

    @WhiteHouse Bullshit. We utterly capitulated. This was a massive failure for the US and a victory for Iran. Vance is a historically illiterate clown. Every single one of our service members who won this war in the battlefield is probably wondering what the hell they were fighting for.

  • Emanuel56353090
    BillsmafiaMFKA He/Bro/Daddy (@Emanuel56353090) reported

    @Battlefield FIX STRIKE POINT AND PUT IT BACK TO HOW IT WAS ********

  • NupeKeem
    NupeKeem 🫡 (@NupeKeem) reported

    @Battlefield @BattlefieldComm you cant fix the notecode yet? I love getting shot behind a wall. Literally the best feeling there is. Imagine being on a streak and you dying behind a wall

  • internetguy63
    Karl Barx (@internetguy63) reported

    @facetedcarapace Anybody who played battlefield 1942 knows those things are impossible not to crash. It can't be done.

  • michgold1
    מכחול 🖌️ (@michgold1) reported

    @sfrantzman Yes, currently there is no intention to create entirely mixed units, but the army's promises can be broken (and have in the past) and certainly there is no guarantee for what would happen in the battlefield.