Battlefield 6 status: server issues and outage reports
No problems detected
If you are having issues, please submit a report below.
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.
- Online Play (39%)
- Sign in (32%)
- Matchmaking (15%)
- Glitches (7%)
- Game Crash (6%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Battlefield 6 outage reports came from the following cities:
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
|---|---|---|
|
|
Matchmaking | 3 days ago |
|
|
Glitches | 4 days ago |
|
|
Online Play | 4 days ago |
|
|
Online Play | 4 days ago |
|
|
Online Play | 5 days ago |
|
|
Online Play | 6 days ago |
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:
-
Anunat (Sky Father) (@omar_alajeeli) reported@NotTheCityInTX @Battlefield yes, when the game didn't need fixing, instead of wasting time and resources on this garbage they need to fix the game. net codes/ gunplay. this is not that important.
-
(TCAG) Командир Бред Кроуфорд (CDR Brad Crawford) (@evo1tactical) reportedIn World War I, the battlefield was trapped in a deadlock. Trenches stretched for miles. Machine guns cut down assaults in seconds. Artillery destroyed everything in reach. Armies could lose thousands of men just trying to gain a few hundred meters. Then came the tank. It was slow, unreliable, loud, and crude. But that was not the point. The point was that it changed the battlefield. It shattered the belief that war had to remain frozen in the mud forever. It gave armies a way to cross trenches, crush wire, protect infantry, and bring movement back to combat. I believe we are witnessing a similar moment right now in Ukraine with drones. At first, many people dismissed drones as small surveillance tools, temporary gadgets, or secondary equipment. That view is gone now. Drones are finding targets, adjusting artillery, striking armor, hitting logistics routes, watching enemy movement, delivering supplies, and helping evacuate wounded. They are shaping decisions every single day on the battlefield. Just like the first tanks, today’s drones are only the beginning. They get jammed. They crash. They are constantly modified. They require skilled operators who adapt every day. But that is how every military revolution begins. The first tank was not the final tank. It was only the first chapter. The drone we see today is also only chapter one. What comes next will be faster systems, smarter autonomy, stronger anti jamming capability, AI assisted targeting, coordinated swarms, robotic breaching systems, unmanned resupply vehicles, and ground and air platforms working directly with infantry units. They will not replace the infantryman. They will strengthen the infantryman. Ground will still have to be taken, held, and secured by human beings. But the soldier of tomorrow will fight with robotic teammates, real time awareness, automated support, and capabilities far beyond what one person could do alone. Ukraine is not just fighting for survival. Ukraine is showing the world what the next era of warfare looks like under real combat conditions. The militaries paying attention today will be stronger tomorrow. Those ignoring these lessons will pay for it later. History remembers the armies that recognized change before everyone else. Слава Україні. Героям слава. 🇺🇦
-
Mariusz Barczak | Senior Cybersecurity Architect (@MariusBarczak) reportedYou Are Scaling Risk INFRASTRUCTURE IS THE NEW BATTLEFIELD For years, organizations believed that cybersecurity was about tools. More dashboards. More alerts. More vendors. More layers. And yet, the system remained the same. Fragmented. Reactive. Unpredictable. Because the problem was never the lack of tools. The problem was the absence of architecture. Today, we are entering a different reality. Global trade is shifting. Supply chains are being reconfigured. Infrastructure is becoming the core of economic power. Ports, logistics networks, cloud systems, data pipelines — they are no longer support functions. They are the backbone of entire economies. And that changes everything. Because when infrastructure becomes central, security is no longer an IT concern. It becomes a structural requirement. The real question is no longer: “How do we detect attacks?” The real question is: “Why does the system allow this level of exposure in the first place?” This is where most organizations fail. They build systems that are: – connected, but not controlled – scalable, but not secured – efficient, but not resilient And then they try to protect them with tools. That approach does not work anymore. Attackers do not break systems. They use what the system already allows. Misconfigured access. Overprivileged roles. Invisible trust relationships. Uncontrolled execution paths. This is not exploitation. This is architecture failure. In a world where logistics defines growth, where infrastructure defines competitiveness, and where digital systems define stability… Security must be designed — not added. Not after deployment. Not after incidents. Not after damage. At the foundation. This is why Zero Trust is not a concept. It is not a trend. It is not a guideline. It is a structural necessity. Because without enforced boundaries, there is no control. Without control, there is no predictability. And without predictability, there is no resilience. Organizations that understand this will lead. They will build systems that are: – controlled by design – predictable under pressure – resilient by architecture And most importantly… They will not depend on reaction. They will operate on certainty. The future will not be defined by who has the most technology. It will be defined by who has the strongest architecture behind it. And in that future, security is no longer a function. It is the foundation of everything. And this is exactly where most discussions about AI, automation, and digital transformation miss the point. We are not scaling intelligence. We are scaling exposure. Every new integration, every API, every automated decision layer increases the attack surface — often invisibly. Organizations celebrate speed. Attackers exploit structure. This asymmetry is growing. Because while companies invest in innovation, very few invest in architectural discipline. And without discipline, scale becomes risk. AI agents, automation pipelines, cloud-native systems — they do not create security challenges. They amplify existing weaknesses. If identity is weak — they multiply it. If access is uncontrolled — they expand it. If trust is implicit — they weaponize it. That is why the next generation of cybersecurity will not be defined by detection. It will be defined by elimination of unnecessary possibilities. Reducing what can happen. Restricting what is allowed. Designing systems where deviation is not just detected — but structurally impossible. This is infrastructure hardening at its core. Not more tools. Not more alerts. Not more noise. But fewer paths. Fewer permissions. Fewer assumptions. And in that simplicity — real security emerges. Because the strongest system is not the one that reacts fastest. It is the one that cannot be meaningfully exploited. This is the shift that is coming. From complexity to control. From reaction to design. From visibility to certainty. And those who understand this early will not just secure their systems. They will redefine how systems are built. #CyberSecurity #ZeroTrust #Infrastructure
-
Major Faizan Ahmed Chattha (retd) (@MajorFaizan37) reportedThe real issue here isn’t just stockpiles—it’s whether decision-makers are getting accurate battlefield assessments
-
Viv (@Vivek_13) reported@BattleNonSense @Battlefield I could be wrong but I feel like for games like these, the majority of the playerbase isn't really on social media to see the issues being pointed out. They play in ignorance. So doing a "stop playing" sorta protest would ultimately not even be that noticeable to EA. Maybe.
-
Ronan Farrow (@RonanFarrow) reported(2/10) In 2022, SpaceX gave the Pentagon an ultimatum: pay roughly $400 million a year for Starlink service in Ukraine—crucial infrastructure the country's military was relying on for battlefield communication—or it would be cut off. Colin Kahl, then Under-Secretary of Defense for Policy, called Elon Musk and pleaded with for more time. Officials told me lives hung in the balance. But they had to be deferential. "Even though Musk is not technically a diplomat or statesman, I felt it was important to treat him as such, given the influence he had on this issue," Kahl told me. A Pentagon official described the dynamic more bluntly: "We are living off his good graces. That sucks."
-
DrHellDog (@DrHellDog) reported@Battlefield Fix BUGS in RedSec rather than posting nonsense!
-
Super Doge (@SuperdoucheDoge) reported@Cappyarmy it's a solution to a problem that doesn't exist anymore on the modern battlefield. and for anti-drone warfare it's way too impractical.
-
Marc Clay (@omniclay2) reported@Battlefield Fix the console matchmaking. This is the only game that that splits the console players, Xbox and PlayStation, forcing us to play with computer players.
-
not cultured (@LVE426) reported@wolfman724 @BattlefieldComm Me too. They've been radio silent about it. Temporary fix for some people is to enable iGPU, in BIOS. But they really need to fix this, it affects multiple titles.
-
Ice-Cream Cone (@IceCream_ConeTV) reported@BattlefieldComm @Battlefield You TTK makes everyone feel like a cheater. Start the bands or fix your ****. Otherwise, I'm done.
-
Marco1374 (@Marko1374) reported@BattlefieldComm The game keeps crashing after 15–20 minutes of gameplay. Please let us know if the issue is being investigated and when it will be fixed.
-
JohnnyKing (@JohnnysKings) reported@Battlefield any tip on how to fix audio stop working mid game on ps5?
-
David Rejl (@Davidrejll) reported@JHochderffer @smdcapital Weakness? Tesla literally has their patents opened. You know why? Because they're not ******* like all other companies laying mines on the battlefield. There won't be just one robot on the market. Just like there isn't one phone brand. There will be many companies doing the same ****. Copying every move Elon does. But ultimately, people still buy iPhones, you know why? Because they like the brand and don't believe a single word that comes out of the chinese communists' mouth. And that's good. Optimus will play a huge role in Tesla's Future. Creating a loop, where these robots will need 0 human interaction. They will mine materials, self driving cars will transport then to the factories, where more robots build more of themselves. They will also build solar panels and deploy those. Creating a loop, where electricity and labor becomes so cheap, anyone can own anything and get any service they want. At that point, money becomes pointless, where the real currency Is computation and power. Tesla has all the pieces for such future, others don't come EVEN close.
-
JanTRO (@DaJanTRO) reported@BattlefieldInte Battlefield doesn't need new content. I don't feel any specific way about it. What Battlefield needs is better vehicles, more balanced guns, a reason to play Assault No new (insert thingy you like the most) will fix Battlefield like a balance overhaul. All in all its a good BF
-
borblub (@borblub741776) reported@tdawgsmitty Battlefield isn't heading any problems
-
AlliN When Playing (@Allin_Playing) reported@BattleNonSense @Battlefield I think that the absolute /thread on how all of the "older" BF fans feel - is what a parody of itself the "who was that" launch trailer has become. This game literally added the same looking skins to the game that they've made fun of. And that is the least of the issues, obv.
-
Cuh_evil_313 (@Cuh_Evil_313) reported@SilkOCE @EA_DICE Game in such a bad state we got content creators begging for ONE fix
-
Tian Xchange (@TianXchange) reportedLast year, I sat across from a couple I’ll call Ada and Chinedu. They had been married for 8 years, with two beautiful children, and on paper they looked like the perfect family. But behind closed doors, their home had become a battlefield of silence and sudden explosions. It started small. Chinedu’s business was expanding, so he was rarely home before 10 pm. Ada, a teacher, carried the full load of school runs, homework, cooking, and managing the house alone. She began to feel invisible. Every time she tried to talk about it, Chinedu would say, “I’m doing all this for us,” and the conversation would end in an argument or cold silence that lasted days. One evening, Ada found a lipstick stain on Chinedu’s shirt that wasn’t hers. She didn’t accuse him outright she just withdrew completely. Chinedu, sensing the distance but not understanding why, started staying out even later. The tension became so thick that even the children noticed. That was when Ada called me in tears: “If we don’t fix this, I’m leaving.” They came for their first counseling session together, sitting on opposite ends of the couch like strangers. I asked one simple question: “When was the last time you felt truly heard by your partner?” Both of them went quiet. That silence told me everything. Over the next ten weeks, we unpacked the real issues. It wasn’t the lipstick (which turned out to be from a client’s hug at a business dinner). It was years of unspoken expectations, unexpressed appreciation, and the dangerous belief that “love should just understand” without communication. We worked on practical tools: Daily 15-minute “check-in” conversations with no phones or distractions Learning to express needs without blame (“I feel lonely when…” instead of “You never…”) Creating a shared vision for their family instead of operating on assumptions Rebuilding trust through small, consistent actions not grand gestures There were tears. There were moments Chinedu almost walked out. There were sessions where Ada said she didn’t think she could forgive the years of feeling invisible. But they kept showing up. In our final session, Chinedu looked at his wife and said, “I thought providing was enough. I never knew my absence was breaking your heart. I’m sorry.” Ada cried and replied, “I stopped telling you how I felt because I thought you didn’t care. I was wrong too.” Today, they are still together — stronger, more intentional, and deeply in love again. They send me updates: family dinners are back, date nights are sacred, and they even started a small tradition of writing each other appreciation notes every Sunday. Marriage isn’t perfect. It gets messy. But when two people are willing to do the hard, humble work of understanding each other instead of trying to “win,” healing is possible. If you’re reading this and your marriage feels like it’s cracking under pressure whether it’s money, time, trust, or silence please know it’s not too late. Reach out to a counselor. Get help. The right counseling can turn “I can’t do this anymore” into “I’m so glad we didn’t give up.” Love is not just a feeling. It is a choice we keep choosing, even when it’s hard.
-
iPassedYouOnTheRight (@Bottoz1) reported@SilkOCE @EA_DICE DICE PLZ. 100-2 YouTube Streamer can't go 100-0 due to laser designator. It's affecting his subs and ad revenue. Fix the game.
-
Colt_45 (@Lambetgaming) reported@BattlefieldComm The orange dots for new equipment has gotta get fixed in season 3 I’ve got 5 guns saying there’s something new but i have gone through all the slots possible and nothing. Please guys fix it soon.
-
Aditya (@buildaditya) reported@0x45o they are, just not for desktops android, watchos, visionos, fire os, tizen the battlefield moved to devices where they control the hardware too desktop OS is a distribution problem nobody wants to solve again
-
CrimsonPaladin (@R3d_L3tt3rs) reported@ToneMythic “…there was no glory. All of my men, the enemy, scattered or broken on the battlefield. There is no joy in that. War- War never changes.”
-
@Pizzaro FCB (@pyzaroti) reported@pissmaker03 @felixherbt @PoliceNG There is a reason why citizens rush to join US military. Go read about their benefits while in service, retired or die in the battlefield. Only then you’ll understand better.
-
Millstone Distributor (@Millston3r) reported@oldfatbjjbydave @hippojuicefilm The ‘enabling antisocial individuals’ problem. If someone shot up a school would you say: “aww shucks those skills would have been really impressive on the battlefield! heeyuck!”? Goofy. Like how much of a cuck do you have to be to see this video and the only thing you have to say is to point out how talented he is? What bizarre form of Stockholm syndrome is this?
-
Tricia Newkirk (@bbfitnut) reported@JayHill223 @krassenstein At some point, we have to admit the cycle itself is the problem. The constant escalation, the selective framing, the way every phrase becomes a battlefield. It’s exhausting, it’s divisive, and it’s not helping anyone.
-
Owen West (@OwenWest91) reportedAfter the Cold War, U.S. defense budgets as a % of GDP plummeted. So we chose quality over quantity. This investment thesis worked for 30 years. Yet when battlefield evidence demonstrated that our weapons portfolio required urgent reallocation to cheap, unmanned systems, inertia prevented any meaningful pivot. The ‘23, ‘24 and ‘25 budgets closely resembled ‘22. @PeteHegseth and Feinberg deserve enormous credit not only for requesting a healthy top line increase but also ringfencing $54B for autonomous warfare. The power in the request is procurement. With soaring personnel costs and ‘must pay’ bills from legacy systems, at 2.8% GDP the @SecWar has little budgetary flexibility. At 4.5% GDP, this budget allows Hegseth to start the pivot to scaled purchases that flip the cost exchange. It remains well short of Reagan’s 6% budgets. According to GAO, rising entitlement and debt service costs will soon drive the defense budget back under 2.8%. This is a generational opportunity to harness nascent non-traditional defense companies. Fueled by private capital, our world’s best entrepreneurs have volunteered to defend our nation. They are accelerants to diversify our portfolio and dramatically boost our combat power rapidly, autonomously, and cheaply.
-
Joel Alain (@joelalain) reported@KarolineGosling and men will die on the battlefield to fix the repercussions of it
-
# (@SirQuacksAlot21) reported@EA @EA_DICE @BattlefieldComm more errors in 2042. Social tab intermittently shows Pc players online/out of game while actively in game. Players cannot join party, only accept invites. Active in match players show in game for seconds then online/out of game for minutes.
-
Sketchy Bogan 🇦🇺 (@SketchyBogan_) reported@SilkOCE @EA_DICE Easy fix: give it a cooldown timer; you can only use it once every 10 seconds, etc.