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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
Nantes, Pays de la Loire 3
Bitche, ACAL 1
Paris, Île-de-France 34
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
Haguenau, ACAL 1
Labenne, Nouvelle-Aquitaine 1
Fort-de-France, Martinique 1
Montpellier, Occitanie 2
Troyes, ACAL 2
Dole, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté 2
Jarville-la-Malgrange, ACAL 1
Namur, Wallonia 1
Toulouse, Occitanie 1
Villeurbanne, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes 1
Grenoble, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes 1
City of Brussels, Brussels Capital 1
Hayes, England 1
Chambray-lès-Tours, Centre 1
Angers, Pays de la Loire 1
Langon, Nouvelle-Aquitaine 1
Johnstone, Scotland 1
Auray, Brittany 1
Dreux, Centre 1
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Community Discussion

Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.

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Battlefield 6 Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • isjustnatural
    Peace🕊️ (@isjustnatural) reported

    @BattlefieldComm Would you mind fixing the TTK, it is killing this game. No point playing this game unless you finally fix that ****!!! Reduce the RPM for fu@&€ sake!!!!!

  • KevinGame2013
    thed.vawaifu (@KevinGame2013) reported

    @GiveMeBanHammer Because in 2017 ea ceo said single player games aren't profitable anymore that live service is the way of the future and look how that turned out with anthem and battlefield 2042

  • RealDonElliott
    Don Elliott (@RealDonElliott) reported

    yeah @Battlefield my game indicated the shots were from behind but the tank was way the opposite way. Absolutely everything is broken.

  • TNTJohn1717
    PaulsCorner-VerseQuest (@TNTJohn1717) reported

    The Danger Of Spiritual Ignorance Key Passage: 2 Corinthians 2:11 “Lest Satan should get an advantage of us: for we are not ignorant of his devices.” (2 Corinthians 2:11) Introduction There is a dangerous kind of ignorance that wears a Bible under its arm, says “Amen” at the right places, talks about holiness, quotes verses on separation, and still helps the devil because it does not understand his devices. That is what 2 Corinthians 2:11 is warning about. Paul is not talking to lost pagans in a tavern. He is not talking to idolaters bowing before Diana. He is not talking to philosophers in Athens or Caesar’s household in Rome. He is talking to a church. He is talking to saved people. He is talking to Corinthians who had already been corrected, grieved, disciplined, and instructed. And he says, “Lest Satan should get an advantage of us: for we are not ignorant of his devices.” A church can be saved and still be stupid about Satan’s methods. A church can stand against one device and fall for another. A church can finally deal with sin, then turn around and help Satan by refusing to restore the repentant. The context matters. Paul is not giving a general demonology lecture so saints can become fascinated with devils. He is not encouraging believers to chase shadows, name demons, map principalities, or blame every bad mood on some spirit in the curtains. He is dealing with a specific church problem. A man had sinned. The church had disciplined him. The punishment was sufficient. Now the man needed forgiveness, comfort, and confirmed love. Why? “Lest perhaps such a one should be swallowed up with overmuch sorrow” (2 Corinthians 2:7). Then Paul adds, “Lest Satan should get an advantage of us.” That means Satan was waiting around the edges of church discipline, looking for a second opening. He had already worked through sin. Now he wanted to work through excessive sorrow. He had already used the man’s fall. Now he wanted to use the church’s failure to restore. That is how subtle the devil is. The danger of spiritual ignorance is that a church can think it is defending holiness while actually serving one of Satan’s devices. That ought to make every Bible believer sober. The devil does not always walk into a church wearing a red suit and carrying a pitchfork. Sometimes he comes with tolerance and says, “Do not judge sin.” Other times he comes with severity and says, “Never forgive him.” Sometimes he promotes compromise. Other times he promotes cruelty. Sometimes he says, “Let the leaven stay.” Other times he says, “Keep crushing the repentant man after the leaven has been purged.” If you only know one side of his work, you can still be used on the other side. Paul says, “we are not ignorant of his devices.” The church had better prove that by knowing when to discipline, when to forgive, when to comfort, and when to shut the devil out before he turns holy language into an unholy weapon. Chapter One Satan Gains Ground Through Ignorant Saints Paul says, “Lest Satan should get an advantage of us.” That means Satan is not merely looking for open wickedness in the alley. He is looking for an advantage inside the assembly. He wants ground. He wants leverage. He wants an opening. He wants to take a church’s weakness, emotion, ignorance, anger, pride, grief, fear, or imbalance and use it against the work of God. A man who thinks Satan only works through obvious sin has already missed half the battlefield. The devil can use fornication, drunkenness, pride, bitterness, false doctrine, gossip, and division. But he can also use unbalanced zeal, unbiblical severity, unresolved sorrow, and unforgiveness dressed up like holiness. Ignorant saints are useful to the devil because they can be sincere and still be dangerous. A church can honestly think it is protecting purity while it is failing to obey God’s command to restore. The Corinthians had once been wrong for tolerating sin. They were puffed up when

  • Suhyeem
    Xiǎobǎihé (@Suhyeem) reported

    That morning, the moment I entered the conference room, I realized the nature of the anomaly had changed. The anomalies up until now had been "branching." Reality split into multiple parts. But today was different. It wasn't branching; the existing branches themselves were being "rearranged." A battlefield map was displayed on the wall screen. But it wasn't just one map. More than thirty battlefield layers were superimposed on the same coordinates. Each possessed an independent military reality, each claiming to be the legitimate one. In one layer, F-35s were fully operational. In another layer, all aircraft had been lost. And yet another layer, the F-35s weren't even present in that battlefield. I took a deep breath and said, "This is no longer electronic warfare." Before someone could answer, another analyst interrupted. "Electronic warfare is a physical layer issue. This is a cognitive layer issue." Cognitive layer. The fact that this term was being used as if it were formal military jargon made me feel slightly dizzy. On another screen, the engagement log of an Apache helicopter was displayed. But it was the same here. "Shot down" "Returned" "Never even sortied" Three realities existed simultaneously on the battlefield. I pointed to one of them. "Where does this 'shot down' layer come from?" The analyst couldn't answer immediately. After a few seconds, he finally said: "Multiple civilian surveillance data and social media analysis." I understood immediately. Civilian data was generating "military reality." It was reversed. Normally, the military defines reality, and civilians track it. But now, civilian observations were forming part of the military log, and that was being fed back into the military's assessment. At that moment, another alert sounded. "Reference System Reverse Flow Detected" I stared at the screen. Reference system reverse flow. It wasn't just a confusion of information. It meant that the "order in which reality is defined" was reversed. Someone whispered softly. "Interpretation determines the battlefield before the actual situation." No one corrected those words. In fact, everyone was beginning to accept it as fact. I slowly operated my terminal and switched all layers to integrated display. For a moment, the screen flickered with noise. And what appeared wasn't a battle situation. 《Reference Conflict: Critical》 Seeing those words, I felt a chill run down my spine. A war of references. It wasn't weapons fighting. It was the very concept of "what we call reality" that was fighting. And in that war, the concept of a conclusion didn't yet exist.

  • sit_nerd33
    Trump is Still Cooked (@sit_nerd33) reported

    @ELLEL1234 Christianity is the divisive force and has us arguing about ******* Jewish fairytales all day instead of solving problems. The theological battlefield is where the Jews win, this is why they suck you into it because they wrote the book and it is their fake history

  • PixieStrmDesign
    🧚‍♀️✨ Pixie Storm Studios ✨🧚‍♀️ (@PixieStrmDesign) reported

    I’m currently working on a memoir about my life with an Eating Disorder. It’s called Bone Deep. This is chapter 1: The Beginning of Hunger One of us had to die, and I was convinced it would be me. I didn’t always have the words for it. Back then, it didn’t feel like a life-or-death battle. It felt like discipline. Like control. Like I had finally figured something out that other people hadn’t. But even as a little girl, something in me was already unraveling. I remember standing in front of the mirror, turning sideways, then forward again, studying my body like it was something separate from me—something to fix. I didn’t know where the voice came from, the one that told me I was too much. Too soft. Too big. Just… too. It was quiet at first. Easy to ignore. Then it wasn’t. The thoughts settled in early, embedding themselves into the way I saw everything. Food became numbers before it ever reached my mouth. Movement became something to earn, not something to enjoy. I learned, without realizing I was learning, that smaller meant better. Smaller meant safer. Smaller meant worthy. I counted almonds like they were sins. Five meant control. Six meant failure. There was comfort in the numbers. They gave me rules, and rules made the world feel less chaotic. If I followed them perfectly, nothing bad could happen—or at least, that’s what I told myself. I don’t remember the exact moment food stopped being nourishment and became a battlefield. There wasn’t a single turning point, no dramatic shift. It happened slowly, quietly, the way shadows stretch across a room without you noticing. But I do remember the silence. It followed me everywhere. At the dinner table. At school. Lying in bed at night, staring at the ceiling while my stomach ached and my thoughts ran in circles. I became tight-lipped, careful. Every bite calculated. Every choice measured. I remember staring at my plate, doing the math before I allowed myself to take a single bite. Adding, subtracting, bargaining with myself. If I eat this, I won’t eat later. If I skip that, I’ll be okay. It didn’t feel dangerous. Not yet. In the beginning, it felt like I had found something that worked. Something that quieted the noise in my head—the constant hum of not-enough. Hunger became something I could measure, something I could win against. And winning felt good. There’s a kind of high that comes with control, with denying yourself and calling it strength. With watching the numbers go down and believing that means you’re doing something right. For a while, I held onto that feeling like it was proof that I was okay. But control is deceptive. It doesn’t announce when it starts slipping away from you. What began as something I chose slowly became something that chose me. The rules multiplied. The numbers mattered more. The space food occupied in my mind grew until it crowded out everything else. It wasn’t just about eating anymore—it was about fear. Guilt. Obsession. It was about being good enough in a way that always felt just out of reach. Food wasn’t just food anymore. It was a test I was always failing. And the strangest part is, from the outside, it didn’t always look like anything was wrong. I smiled when I was supposed to. I said I had already eaten. I pushed food around my plate in ways that looked convincing enough. I learned how to disappear in plain sight. No one saw the calculations happening in my head. No one heard the voice that never stopped talking. No one felt the exhaustion of fighting a battle that followed me everywhere I went. By the time anyone might have noticed, I was already in too deep.

  • ThunderCrate6
    Crate of Thunder (@ThunderCrate6) reported

    The GAU-8/A Avenger Popular mythology states that the GAU-8 came about solely to kill Soviet tanks. In actuality, the gun was an integral part of the A-X design from the beginning, specifically designed to be the most flexible and versatile weapon that could engage across the spectrum of targets that CAS requires. The A-X would be required to engage everything from infantry, to prepared defensive positions (reinforced machine-gun nests), through staging areas, to columns of main battle tanks—the entirety of enemy equipment on the battlefield. While certain weapons did well against certain targets, only a gun effectively spanned the entire range of expected targets. In the discussion of caliber, the design team analyzed all options. The 20mm enjoyed support as the most readily available and “standard” option for US fighters, however, it did not live up to the tasks and requirements laid before the A-X. To satisfy the requirement of killing armor while retaining effectiveness across the battlefield, the team settled between 25 and 35mm. 35mm provided perhaps the best option for anti-armor but would have required a reciprocating cannon instead of a Gatling Gun, which would have in-turn reduced reliability. Since a Gatling-style gun was needed, the GAU-8 became a 30mm. Recent discussions on the use of Depleted Uranium (DU) as armor penetration rounds have circulated through the media. DU creates heavy-metal residue that can lead to cancerous growths due to exposure—all heavy metals do this, but DU carries the unfortunate title of URANIUM, which sounds bad in usage, and therefore ends up as a target in the media. Tungsten has been floated as an alternative to DU—while still a heavy metal, so the after-effects would remain the SAME. However, it sounds better, and sometimes that’s all the difference, right? Interestingly enough, tungsten was considered as a penetrator early in the development of the 30mm round. However, DU creates better incendiary and secondary effects as it reacts with armor while it penetrates. The pyrophoric effect of DU exponentially adds to the killing power of the round that would not be present with other penetrators, and this effect was studied in-depth early in the design phase. The 30mm rounds that the GAU-8 required did not exist in an “off the shelf” capacity and had to be created from zero. The gun itself was relatively inexpensive, so far as weaponry is concerned. The bullets, however, nearly crippled the program. Wartime stockpile planning required six months of war-reserve-material 30mm to be stocked, and the initial cost per round for these 30mm rounds was $115 EACH! True to form, the bureaucracy of the service led the charge here, and most of that cost came in packaging and storage as required under current MILSPEC regulations. One VERY creative officer got all that changed, Bob Bilger (spelling?) and the price of each round dropped to $13. He also dramatically changed the testing of the gun. Originally, the GAU-8 was to be tested on a stand, engaging a simple target, as most guns were. Under Bilger’s direction, the test was changed to a live, aerial firing, which uncovered dramatic flaws. The first successful firing of the GAU-8 was followed in short-order (same flight) by the first successful ejection from an A-10! The GAU-8 produced so much smoke, that it blinded the pilot during firing, and the residue flamed out both engines. These flaws would NEVER have been discovered on a test stand! He also developed the true Lot Acceptance Verification Program (LAVP) that resides in A-10 historical lore. He managed to acquire an impressive array of tanks, of both friendly and Soviet designs. (The unlikely and clandestine manners in which this came about is a story in-and-of itself!) In the end, they created the fourth largest armored formation in the world! The test also directed that the tanks be configured in combat configurations (the Army was known for filling gas tanks with water during such tests—I guess it shows where the leaks would come from, but did nothing to show actual combat effects!), and a team was assembled that could repair the tanks for repeated testing. The results were far and above expectations, showcasing the true power of the 30mm DU round in not only penetrating armor, but the deadly effects that such rounds created once they made it through that shell. Coincidentally, about this same time, a Texas delegation demanded a flyoff between the A-7 and A-10. While the Hog performed well in the tests, the LAVP results sealed the deal—no external 30mm gun pod on established fighters could match what the GAU-8 proved in the desert near Nellis. Interesting side note: A-10 pilots like to point out how the GAU-8 system retains its spent casings—so as not to spit out metal over the battlefield. Sprey felt that this was an unnecessary addition that came with the risk of added weight and potentially critical jams, and fought for a traditional expulsion upon firing. He lost that battle, though he admits that the system works better than he had feared at the time. The question of first-round hits vs employing longer bursts: The question was posed concerning the testing and accuracy of the GAU-8—was it ever tested to determine how the accuracy of the gun changed throughout a single firing? Every A-10 pilot is taught about the spin-up time of the gun and how that affects the placement of initial rounds. After that spin-up time, the remaining bullets employed “should” demonstrate a common accuracy within the known dispersion of the cannon (accounting for such “kicks” to the round as the Magnus and Gatling Effects). Hogs are renowned for employing long “combat” bursts of between 100 to 150 rounds, but the question remains: are we wasting bullets after a certain point, or are those long bursts required to account for all variables and effectively provide the desired effects against a given target? Acoustic-score technology fails to provide us these answers as they only register the total number of “hits,” and not the order of record. High speed, hi-resolution cameras would be necessary to accomplish such testing, and even then—the environment would have to be altered to account for all of the dust clouds that are kicked up every time the gun is employed—it might be difficult if not impossible to record shots after a certain number of rounds. Additionally, so many other factors play in to the discussion; aimpoint, stress, environmentals—all of which could be accounted for with a detailed-enough program, and the technology certainly exists if anyone was willing to spend the money to make it happen this late in the aircraft’s lifespan. But, out of this discussion came an interesting point—the design team envisioned 50 round bursts, or the ability to engage 20 individual targets with the gun. An eye-opening point, especially when contrasted with the manner in which the gun has been employed throughout the A-10’s impressive service. It should be noted, however, that the original gun was installed without the later technology called Precision Attitude Control. When engaged, this system “locks” the flight controls to hold the aimpoint on the target. The pilot can still refine the aimpoint as control is transferred to the trim tabs. This addition to the A-1 VASTLY increased its accuracy in longer bursts, and improved the density of bullets on a single aimpoint. Prior to PAC, some studies assessed that only the first 25 rounds retained the most accuracy. With PAC, pilots at the biannual Hawgsmoke event have proven to register upwards of 98-99% hits with the gun!

  • ohyeahmister2
    Cooltaha ඞ 🔻💔 (@ohyeahmister2) reported

    @InsiderGeo The west is slow to respond and is failing to see the threat for now. The elites are too myopic and focused on internal alliance issues rather than facing the reality on the battlefield

  • Jima93
    Jima93 (@Jima93) reported

    @Battlefield Kindly fix the AA launchers as they must have a 99% miss rate built in. And dont force people to play a mode they despise for an event. I know u guys are trying. But this is not it

  • Aweragestupid
    Miki (@Aweragestupid) reported

    @HavryshkoMarta I don't believe in western numbers but I do believe casualties are high on both sides. The problem is, war is easy to start, hard to stop. And after western escalations, stopping now would mean losing the war and deterrent. It will be concluded on the battlefield for sure.

  • memesterbation
    memesterbation (@memesterbation) reported

    @_Deez_Games I cancelled my subscription last week. **** em. I honestly forget about the online service anyway. Battlefield 6 is boring and all not matches now anyway

  • ElJawnJefe
    ElJawnJefe (@ElJawnJefe) reported

    @Battlefield Fix Your ****** As ******* Servers, No Reason Anyone Should Have To Wait 34 Mins To Gather 80 ******* People For A Game Do ******* Better

  • LogicNotLore
    —- (@LogicNotLore) reported

    @Battlefield this last update has tons of people crashing mid game and losing RP. When’s the fix for this? I’ve never crashed so much.

  • psychosoap
    Psycho Soap (@psychosoap) reported

    Most people don’t understand strategy. They complicate it. They confuse it. They avoid it. We are all faced with the problem of limited resources. Strategy is used to determine where you direct those limited resources. Example: Your morning time is a resource that you must direct your actions. Example: Goal: get lean. Choices: 1) Eat high calorie low satiating food. 2) Eat high protein healthy 3) Fast until noon #1 does not align with that goal you are best to choose 2 or 3. The problem though is the mind. Most people fail not because they don’t know what to do. They fail because they follow the sabotaging thoughts in their mind. “I deserve this...” “I’ll start tomorrow.” “So and So doesn’t have to work this hard why should I?” That is how great men who seem invincible fail as well. Creating a strategy is easy. Executing on strategy is extremely hard when your mind is the battlefield. I’m bringing this back to psycho soap see. You must train your mind to be resilient to the thoughts that ruin you. Cold showers and psycho soap naturally help you produce norepinephrine which is your guard against these thoughts. Seriously…. This is the answer Don’t take my word for it…

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