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Battlefield 6

Battlefield 6 status: server issues and outage reports

Problems detected

Users are reporting problems related to: sign in, online play and glitches.

Full Outage Map

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.

June 25: Problems at Battlefield 6

Battlefield 6 is having issues since 09:10 PM IST. Are you also affected? 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%)
  • 34% Online Play (34%)
  • 13% Glitches (13%)
  • 8% Matchmaking (8%)
  • 8% Game Crash (8%)
  • 0% Hacking / Cheating (0%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Paris Sign in 2 minutes ago
Villeurbanne Sign in 2 minutes ago
Grenoble Sign in 4 minutes ago
City of Brussels Glitches 5 minutes ago
Hayes Sign in 6 minutes ago
Chambray-lès-Tours Sign in 7 minutes 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:

  • GetCheatz
    Mr. Margheritiiii (@GetCheatz) reported

    @falsewoodxt @HeatherMischief @DooM49 influencer... 🤡 He's raving on YouTube and on X how Battlefield 6 is perfect and you're saying I'm the only one who has problems with Battlefield 6... 🤡 I'm not the only one who has problems like someone wrote above...

  • BonaldTrosby
    Bonald Trosby (@BonaldTrosby) reported

    @rabbriansamuel This is a cogent and thoughtful response to the question of why. Others should try to spell it out similarly instead of acting like Israel is holding the gates against America’s fiercest enemy on the battlefield and if the bond is broken mullahs will rule in Cleveland tomorrow

  • DownHomeJohn
    John (@DownHomeJohn) reported

    @BattlefieldComm How about the bug where bots one shot me with a tank round from a smg and then the red outline of my killer is a tank, not the single infantryman I was attempting to gun battle? Is the game actually that broken? Is the game unraveling because of all the broken patches?

  • watchindy
    Magnetosphere (@watchindy) reported

    @ProfStanciu @ProfStanciu to be walking inside myself as a regular civilian and fighting with my blood cells as if my body is the battlefield of everyone's problems

  • 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

  • Wormwarone
    Lumbricus Terrestris (@Wormwarone) reported

    @BattlefieldComm Tried downloading and the update is stuck. Anyone else have this issue?

  • bassel_doueik
    Bassel Doueik (@bassel_doueik) reported

    The U.S.-Iran agreement was announced on June 15, set to be signed this Friday, June 19, 2026. One of the main sticking points is the Lebanon issue. Is Lebanon included? if yes, does this mean the war is over, Israeli attacks will cease, and a withdrawal will take place? From my perspective, the U.S.-Iran agreement will transform the battlefield in Lebanon from an all-out war to tit-for-tat exchanges between Israel and Hezbollah. Hostilities will not be completely over, but the conflict will be reduced in scale and in scope. This will likely continue in the near term due to the presence of Israeli occupation in southern Lebanon. I think the main question would be: will the new shape of war in Lebanon be an obstacle for a final agreement between the U.S. and Iran? Map taken from Liveuamap - June 17, 2026. Blue - Israeli occupation Yellow Line - Self-declared Israeli influence line

  • Sayber_31
    Sayber_31 (@Sayber_31) reported

    @the_patcher77 @BattlefieldComm The problem is unless the feedback comes from some with ttv or yt at the end of their username they’re not listening.

  • EGabrielK
    Gabriel K (@EGabrielK) reported

    @GokTurk_01001 @Emrulla48879475 @hermes_z You are talking about technical issues for a plane under development produced by an industry that hasn't produced anything similar and compare it against an airplane from a superpower that based its battlefield dominance in air power and has fought in hign intensity conflicts. 🤡

  • krisnair
    Kris Nair (@krisnair) reported

    The battlefield is not a geometry problem. It never was.

  • Fredvelezcrypto
    Fred Velez (@Fredvelezcrypto) reported

    Morning BTC read: The chart is still not pretty. BTC rejected the $65.5K–$66.5K range high and is now sitting closer to the lower half of the current battlefield. Right now, I see the active range like this: Range high: $65.5K–$66.5K Mid-zone: $62K–$64K Range low: $60K–$61K Major line: $58.1K The liquidation heatmap also shows liquidity stacked below, especially around the $61K–$62K area, with deeper danger still near $60K. So yes, BTC can still sweep lower. But here is the key: this is not confirmed collapse yet. It is a market trapped in a violent range. The problem for bulls is ETF flows are not helping. Another red BTC ETF day. Roughly -$90.7M yesterday. That comes after -$82.2M the day before. So the market has: weak ETF demand negative structure liquidity below DXY still elevated and BTC below the reclaim zone That is not the setup for blind optimism. For bulls, the first job is simple: reclaim $64K–$64.5K. Then $65.5K–$66.5K. Until then, every bounce is just a bounce inside a damaged range. If BTC loses $62K cleanly, I think the market starts hunting $60K–$61K again. If BTC holds this zone and reclaims $64K+, then we can talk about stabilization. No need to overcomplicate it. BTC is not dead. But buyers have not taken control. This is still a trigger market. No confirmation, no conviction.

  • DuffyMorgan_
    vitor 🦅 (@DuffyMorgan_) reported

    @BattlefieldComm There's a lighting issue when we use the first person on vehicles, did you guys already fix that or no?

  • weepworp
    worpweep (@weepworp) reported

    @BattlefieldComm I hit a truck with 5 rpgs today and it didn't ******* die. Thats a problem.

  • kasemoond
    KaseMond (@kasemoond) reported

    He lost his right arm and broke his left one being thrown out from the explosion on the battlefield. However, his service hasn't stopped there yet: Kurt wants to switch to gebirgsjäger, as he finds mountains close to his spirit. He is learning to use rifle with one hand and legs

  • KumarRahul65453
    RAHUL SHARMA 🇮🇳 (@KumarRahul65453) reported

    @unusual_whales "Iran's strategy in one sentence: survive the battlefield, win the bargaining table. The problem is when both sides think they're winning the same negotiation." 🤔

  • Hoskins1st
    Ryan (@Hoskins1st) reported

    @BattlefieldComm How can someone have the battle pass and still can’t get into the shop to receive the free gift from buying the battle pass. That’s makes no sense that you lock them out completely. Support has never responded to the problem. @Battlefield @BattlefieldComm

  • CryptoXb32567
    CryptoXB (@CryptoXb32567) reported

    @Battlefield I KNOCK A GUY AND HE LEAVES THE GAME. I DONT GET MY KILL. FIX IT!!!!! NOW

  • thelifeofseezy
    🔻 Seezy (@thelifeofseezy) reported

    @DooM49 Yup. Battlefield 6 is what I imagined a future Battlefield 3 to look like. The lack of content was depressing. Finally we getting there. Battlefield 4 had a rough first 2 years too, but that was rather technical issues

  • ChrisSlaske
    chris (@ChrisSlaske) reported

    @Battlefield nice job making the game go black screen with today's update. Guess you didnt fix it

  • CAMIKAZE78
    CAMIKAZE78 (@CAMIKAZE78) reported

    "This is what PEAK Battlefield gameplay looks like". This mode was literally you clicking prompts on an iPad, or on your PC like a cookie clicker game... This couldn't be further from "peak gameplay" in the context of an FPS game and when we consider the actual, important issues with BF6, any time spent on this feature would be wasted dev time imo.

  • Lucky_Bullet
    J-Dizzle (@Lucky_Bullet) reported

    @BattlefieldComm what the F is going on with StrikePoint! F……….! Can you fix it any slower!

  • nasserturki11
    ناصر بن تركي (@nasserturki11) reported

    This is exactly the problem with Washington’s hardline Iran debate. It treats the Middle East as a battlefield for ideological theories, while the region itself has to live with the consequences. Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Turkey, Pakistan, Oman, and others did not push for de-escalation because they trust Tehran. They pushed for it because they understand geography, energy markets, shipping lanes, and the cost of a war that no one can fully control once it starts. Every time, outside hawks promise a clean outcome. Every time, the region is left dealing with the consequences. Israel may want permanent pressure on Iran. Some voices in Washington may want regime collapse. But regional states have a different responsibility: protect their economies, their societies, their infrastructure, and their long-term stability. That is not appeasement. That is sovereignty. The real question is not whether Iran should be trusted. It should not. The real question is whether endless escalation has ever produced the stable Middle East its advocates keep promising. It has not. The countries that chose diplomacy, deterrence, and regional balance were not being naive. They were being realistic. And this war proved their point.

  • DeenRatio
    Faith Under Pressure (@DeenRatio) reported

    @JoeyMannarino The world is still paying the price for ideas that belonged to a seventh-century battlefield. The problem is not just what criminals do. The deeper problem is when people can point to religious texts and find justification for those actions.

  • 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.

  • FunzaaTV
    FUN (@FunzaaTV) reported

    @KobsonskaKaupa @BattlefieldComm It's well known that Asian players are strong, but the worst ones use VPNs for gaming against us in Apex; it's a recurring problem.

  • 4Thund3r
    Thund3r 4 (@4Thund3r) reported

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

  • Erickschultz11
    Erick (@Erickschultz11) reported

    @mattvanswol We trust institutions to investigate wrongdoing fairly, yet repeated scandals have left many people questioning whether similar failures are treated the same way. Some see accountability being shaped by power, ideology, reputation, fear, or institutional self-protection. Others argue that different cases simply involve different facts, evidence, and constraints. The problem is not necessarily that institutions are acting in bad faith. They may genuinely believe they are applying consistent standards, weighing evidence carefully, protecting due process, avoiding prejudice, or balancing competing social concerns. The deeper issue is that much of this reasoning is often invisible to the public. When decisions are opaque or difficult to scrutinize, people cannot easily distinguish between responsible judgment and narrative management. As trust declines, disagreements spread beyond the events themselves. People begin disagreeing about which sources are credible, which facts matter, and which institutions can be trusted to evaluate the evidence. The result is a crisis of legitimacy. The question is no longer just whether accountability is being applied fairly. The question becomes who gets to decide what happened, how that decision was reached, and why everyone else should trust it. The way forward is not to choose one victim narrative over another. It is to make the process itself more transparent, more consistent, and more open to scrutiny. Every case should be examined through the same questions: who was harmed, who caused the harm, who enabled it, who ignored it, who benefited from silence, and what incentives may have protected the failure? But even that requires something more. We must be willing to apply the same standards of evidence and skepticism to our own preferred narratives that we apply to those we oppose. Without that, accountability becomes another battlefield for competing stories rather than a search for truth. The real challenge is not simply rebuilding trust in institutions. It is rebuilding trust in the processes by which institutions, evidence, and public judgments are evaluated in the first place.

  • ifindmidwits
    ifindmidwits (@ifindmidwits) reported

    @AaronRegunberg If you were a commander on a battlefield and your opponent did something unexpected, does it help you if you go "oh that's weird, I don't get that", or do you send out spies and try to understand what your opponent thinks and why? That information can only help YOU. This is the problem with the left: You don't want to understand what your opponent thinks. It's not intelligent.

  • Mike_2471
    Mike (@Mike_2471) reported

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

  • doublezerodonut
    WarcrimeWaffles (@doublezerodonut) reported

    All I’m gonna say is that the lever action was basically never standard issue equipment. Nobody is scared of your .30-30 or a chrome revolver on the battlefield.