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Battlefield™ 6 News

Whoops, Battlefield 6's official reveal was entirely about the single-player campaign - and we didn't even get a date

EA and DICE just debuted the first-ever trailer for Battlefield 6, right on schedule. The trailer premiered on YouTube moments ago, just days after the game’s official title was announced. The reveal trailer brought our first proper look at the game’s overall aesthetic, confirmed its setting, and offered a brief introduction to its main fighting factions.

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Battlefield 6's release date appears to have leaked, jumping the gun ahead of its reveal trailer

Ahead of Battlefield 6's reveal trailer later today, July 24th, the camo-clad shooter's release date appears to have been shot out into the universe by a leaker.


This isn't the first time EA's latest instalment of putting bullets in faces while someone shouts orders in your ear has been subject to some leaks. This time it's Dealabs' Billbil-kun, who'se got a strong track record when it comes to pulling back the covers on details about games and hardware prior to official reveals.


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Watch the Battlefield 6 reveal trailer here for our first look at the game, and maybe a date for the open beta

Battlefield 6 is real, but you probably already knew that. As one of the most-anticipated releases of - presumably - 2025, it’s taken EA and DICE quite a bit of time to first give the game its proper title, and officially reveal it to the world.

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Battlefield 6 is the name of the next game, but EA won’t say more until tomorrow

The game most of us have been calling Battlefield 6 for months now is, indeed, officially titled that. EA ended speculation about the official name of the next game in the multiplayer shooter series overnight.

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EA let Battlefield 6 players lock weapons to classes in latest scuffle over how much Battlefield should enforce teamwork


EA have decided to let players choose between locking weapons to classes in the forthcoming Battlefield 6, or being able to equip any weapon to any class. It might sound like a throwaway technicality, next to the existential terror of reports that EA want the new shooter to find a following of 100 million players. In practice, the decision to give players the option of locking weapons to classes is Serious Business. it's the latest manifestation of a debate that goes back to Battlefield's formative squabbles with rival FPS Call Of Duty in the noughties.

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