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Battlefield 6

Battlefield 6 Outage Map

The map below depicts the most recent cities worldwide where Battlefield 6 users have reported problems and outages. If you are having an issue with Battlefield 6, make sure to submit a report below

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The heatmap above shows where the most recent user-submitted and social media reports are geographically clustered. The density of these reports is depicted by the color scale as shown below.

Battlefield 6 users affected:

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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.

Most Affected Locations

Outage reports and issues in the past 15 days originated from:

Location Reports
Paris, Île-de-France 33
Mérignac, Nouvelle-Aquitaine 1
Cergy, Île-de-France 2
Casablanca, Casablanca-Settat 1
Courcelles-lès-Lens, Hauts-de-France 1
Aix-en-Provence, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur 1
Rennes, Brittany 2
Orléans, Centre 1
Haguenau, ACAL 2
Lavaur, Occitanie 1
Monthyon, Île-de-France 1
Nancy, ACAL 1
Argentan, Normandy 1
Cadiz, Andalusia 1
Nantes, Pays de la Loire 3
Bitche, ACAL 1
Aurillac, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes 1
Annecy, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes 2
Arvert, Nouvelle-Aquitaine 1
Angoulême, Nouvelle-Aquitaine 1
Nice, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur 1
Pessac, Nouvelle-Aquitaine 1
Marseille, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur 5
Pont-Scorff, Brittany 1
Labenne, Nouvelle-Aquitaine 1
Fort-de-France, Martinique 1
Montpellier, Occitanie 1
Troyes, ACAL 2
Dole, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté 2
Jarville-la-Malgrange, ACAL 1
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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:

  • baycosinus
    Onur Demirλy (@baycosinus) reported

    @IxBeast @BattlefieldComm and? your point other than brain dead "skill issue" template which has no valuable contribution? none. go back to the game, adults are talking here.

  • jessewllc20222
    Jesse (@jessewllc20222) reported

    @BattlefieldComm Guess what people are still ******* being kicked for inactivity even though they are actively playing the game. If season 4 doesnt address and fix this bullshit im uninstalling the game and never buying another battlefield game ever. All season 3 this has been and issue. WTF?????

  • saintjavelin
    Saint Javelin (@saintjavelin) reported

    Fedorov on why people are protesting today: “Ukrainians did not take to the streets for Minister Fedorov personally. They took to the streets because when Ukraine had seized the initiative on the battlefield and in the skies, that trajectory was broken. Ukrainians can sense when decisions are no longer being made based on the values this country stands for.”

  • boredjokester
    Silence (@boredjokester) reported

    @Battlefield So how are some of us gonna play this when the game keeps freezing our pc’s? I thought I fixed it but the problem still occurred just nown

  • LFCFabianFumpii
    Fabian Gaustad Wirtz/OpTic Fumpii (@LFCFabianFumpii) reported

    Battlefield 6 does finally working on my PC at least, no more lagging no more issues. It finally helped to update my PC.

  • Highcalibre
    Robert Anthony (@Highcalibre) reported

    @BattlefieldComm Impossible. Sh*ts been broken since after BF2.

  • marvingardns
    The Good Time Rambler (@marvingardns) reported

    Horseshoe Bend, 1814 I saw this neat overflight view of Horseshoe Bend from one of them generic Alabama history pages. But there was zero context to the tactical problem, which was obviously against the Red Stick’s favor, but not completely. I had walked the battlefield myself so I decided to annotate it. Jackson had been at the end of his rope by the winter of 1813-1814. As attributed to Napoleon, an Army marches on its stomach. He was deep in the wild Coosa and of the 2,000 something soldiers and camp followers crossed the Ditto Ferry with him, less than three hundred remained. The supply of his army was appalling. Most of the U.S. Army’s logistical chain was focused on Canada. What Jackson’s army had left were state legislatures, local contractors and almost nothing to forage in the Coosa. Legend was he faced near mutiny with the mouth of his cannon. But he could not entice expiring militia enlistees to stay. Even David Crockett left the Army to tend to poor Polly back home in the Nickajack to see that she wintered and that he’d sow for the Spring. He’d left John Wesley, William and Margaret behind with her. But he’d return to Army for the summer campaign. But the memory of being so hungry that he’d eaten potatoes boiled in human fat was the most disturbing recollections of his normally wry memoirs. When early Spring returned, so too did more 90-day militia, and some who’d volunteered for the “duration of the present War.” Moreover he had a regiment of regulars of the U.S. Army, the 39th Infantry including a young Lieutenant named Sam Houston. Hopeful to his cause and all were also two cannons in blue carriages. He had probably around 1,500 infantry at most facing across a scrubby but open field of fire (I marked in blue NATO “X”). He placed his two guns on a wooded knoll (red rectangle) about 75 yards from the Creek barricade and shelled the native works for about two hours. But recent rains had soften the logs and made the ground spongy. The bombardment was ineffectual. But by then John Coffee, a close confidante of Jackson and his cavalry commander, had positioned his cavalry dismounts (green rectangle) south of the Tallapoosa Bend as Cherokee allies led by The Whale (and including Major Ridge) rowed a relay of warriors (yellow rectangle) across the River. The Red Stick village of Tohopeka (white circle) was now threatened with being overrun. As their Chief Menawa and other leaders sent some warriors back to contain the Cherokee beachhead, Jackson sent his infantry in. The first assault was probably no more than 350 men, but among the first over the barricade was Lt. Sam Houston who almost immediately took an arrow wound to the groin. It would not be the last wound of the day for him, but it would last the longest. Red Stick defenses quickly collapsed and mayhem, then bedlam ensued. Warriors who tried to escape west across the Tallapoosa were shot down by a screen of pickets along the bank - Tennessee dismounts, Cherokee, White Stick Creeks. It was all over by early afternoon with few captives taken but for a few women and children. Chief Menawa managed an escape. So too did Peter McQueen, who encouraged the Fort Mims massacre. But Jackson had crushed only the heart of the Red Creek resistance. It’s spirit lived on in a few die hard guerrillas like Peter McQueen, who sought refuge around Pensacola begging for firearms from the Spanish and awaiting the coming the British who had a new “Gulf Strategy” to win the War of 1812. There a motley collection of Creek, Seminole and Maroons would continue to resist the new American Gulf expansion, and especially the ever greedy Georgians… But all that is a story for another day.

  • KomradeBaguette
    Komrade Baguette (@KomradeBaguette) reported

    @WhiteboyDexter I don't know the lore of Battlefield 6 but I'm guessing as time passed countries called for Pax's services more and more giving them more budget and influence, and somehow leading to a point countries would propose bigger and bigger deals to get Pax service before other countries

  • xmegaton4salex
    Mr. Megaton (@xmegaton4salex) reported

    @GamewithDave Battlefield 6, it would give me an excuse to play more and get better (and fix my K/D)

  • Dukey2003
    Roman Dukey (@Dukey2003) reported

    @rowell_96 @IxBeast @Battlefield it's not glazing to point out, that it is weird to feel "offended" by a typo... I mean, they are all human and errors occur.

  • arcadionking
    The Tyrant (@arcadionking) reported

    @__Ministorm This was neither an arena nor a battlefield, and he had long since left behind the notion of answering every problem with force. “The chair has paid the price for whatever anger you carry.” A brief silence followed as he regarded her, allowing the heat of the moment to cool. ⠀

  • archeohistories
    Archaeo - Histories (@archeohistories) reported

    She came to Troy not to win the war. She came to die in it... Her name was Penthesilea, queen of the Amazons. She arrived on the plain of Troy in the weeks after Hector's funeral, when the Trojan cause was already tilting. The city knew it. So did she. But she had not come because Troy needed saving. She had come because she needed what only war could offer. Months before her arrival, during a hunt, she had thrown a javelin that went wide. By the account preserved in post-Homeric tradition, the weapon was meant for a deer. It killed her sister Hippolyta instead. The death was an accident. The guilt was absolute. Under the warrior code she carried, blood guilt of that kind could not be settled in gold or ceremony. It required an answer in blood: either the killing of enemies, or the death of the killer. Penthesilea made her choice. She would go to Troy, fight with everything she had, and let the outcome balance the account. She arrived with twelve Amazon warriors at her side. On the battlefield, by the account in Quintus of Smyrna's Posthomerica, she fought with a ferocity that shook the Greeks. Some accounts name Ajax among those she bested. The Trojans, who had not felt hope in weeks, lined the walls to watch. For a stretch of that day, she pushed the Greek forces back toward their ships. That had not happened since Hector was alive. Then Achilles came onto the field. He, too, was carrying something. His closest companion Patroclus was dead. He had already killed Hector in vengeance. He was fighting now with nothing left to prove and nothing left to protect. Two people at the edge of what they could carry met in the middle of the plain. The accounts differ on the particulars of their duel. They agree on the outcome. Achilles killed her. When he removed her helmet and looked at the woman he had just fought, something in him broke. Ancient sources describe grief, astonishment, an emotion the chroniclers could not name cleanly. A soldier named Thersites mocked him for it. Achilles killed him for that. He returned her body. He would not leave her in the field. She came seeking a warrior's death. She received one. Whether it resolved the guilt she carried is a question the poets left open. The queen who arrived at war already broken. The duel that produced a grief no one expected. The moment when the greatest fighter of his age wept over the woman he had just killed. Troy produced many stories. Few carry that particular weight. 📷 : A red-figure cup painted in Athens around 460 BC, now in the Antikensammlungen in Munich, depicts the precise moment Achilles kills her. Their eyes are shown meeting at the instant of death. Scholars know the painter primarily from this work, and gave him the conventional name the Penthesilea Painter. #archaeohistories

  • ermin_h
    Ermin Hamidovic (@ermin_h) reported

    @nuhre_ Depends whether that's an earnest ponderance or whether you're taking the time to delineate between people blindly supporting a corporation, or taking an abstractive step deeper and determining that physical media itself is not intrinsically emblematic of any form of meaningful ownership vis-a-vis software. The disc is the carrier mechanism. The software itself is the same whether downloaded and manually backed up, or shipped on a disc (which itself is perishable and has a set shelf life, if that's of any consequence to you). A notable example of the irrelevancy of the entire argument is Diablo 3. I bought it on release, 14 years ago. It came shipped in a box. Had a disc in it with the game data. Wonderful. Didn't mean anything. It still required an always active internet connection to play. The battlefield regarding ownership and perpetual license largely happened (and was lost by the gamer) back then. The current argument is simply a byproduct of psychological reactance ie. 'I didn't give a **** about the blue ball until the other toddler took it from me and now it's all I care about'. The actual substrate of the issue was settled a generation ago. This is just people whining about the theatrics.

  • Brewahha
    Brewahha (@Brewahha) reported

    I've been on the battlefield since Day 1, and I can promise you there's always been a narrative pushed by shills and bots trying to steer people away. That may not work on Anons, but it absolutely influences normies. Repetition and the appearance of consensus can shape how people perceive an issue. Whether it's accurate or not, people often use what they believe "everyone else thinks" as a shortcut when deciding what to believe themselves. Psychologists have studied this phenomenon for decades. It's often referred to as social proof or the bandwagon effect—the tendency for people to be influenced by what they perceive to be the majority opinion, especially when they're uncertain or don't have strong views of their own. That's why online conversations matter. A comment section filled with one viewpoint, trending hashtags, or overwhelming positive or negative reactions can influence how observers perceive public opinion, even if those reactions don't perfectly reflect reality. The lesson is simple: don't mistake the loudest voices for the majority. Think critically, verify information from reliable sources, and judge issues on the evidence rather than on which side appears to have the bigger crowd.

  • iBrokeMyRouter
    Dolphins are Frauds (@iBrokeMyRouter) reported

    @Battlefield Fix the game first

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