Revision [15320]
This is an old revision of Battlefield 6 Call Duty Black Ops Cold War made by HowardqeCauseytw on 2026-01-27 17:00:57.
Back during the peak battle royale craze, practically every shooter that wasn't Fortnite or PUBG wanted to get in on the action. While the explosion of the battle royale craze did spawn some awesome games like Apex Legends and Call of Duty: Warzone , there have been some that just didn't change much and fell flat. One in particular was Battlefield 5 's Firestorm mode, which fizzled out just as soon as it came
While Modern Warfare has been wildly successful, Battlefield V hit a slump. The game was underwhelming and did not release enough content to keep players hooked, and its battle royale, Firestorm , definitely did not live up to expectations. It's safe to say that Battlefield V put the series into a bad place, and it'll be interesting to see if the next Battlefield game can revive the series. DICE and EA may be able to make a comeback, even with the hyped release of Black Ops Cold War later this y
2019's Call of Duty: Modern Warfare made an interesting change to class customization called Gunsmith, allowing greater customization of weapons and attachments . While Gunsmith was completely new for attachments in Call of Duty , it was very reminiscent of the loadout customization system introduced in Battlefield 3 and expanded in subsequent entries. Integrating that much weapon customization was a first for the time, considering most Call of Duty games stopped at one attachment per gun unless players used something like the Bling perk. But where Battlefield distinguishes itself from Call of Duty in regards to weapons are the clas
Call of Duty will have much more momentum than Battlefield does going into 2021, mostly thanks to Warzone 's surprising success (and Firestorm 's failure). Call of Duty is at a peak of players and and success, but Black Ops Cold War will have to top the previous game if Activision wants to stay on top. Trailers and closed betas are making players excited for Black Ops Cold War , and EA has yet to do anything to revive the hype for a new Battlefield game. Will EA be able to bring back the age-old debate of Call of Duty vs Battlefie
Electronic Arts is planning to release the next installment of its first-person shooter franchise Battlefield on next-generation consoles in the 2022 fiscal year according to EA's Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer Blake Jorgensen. The confirmation comes in prepared remarks from EA's 2020 third quarter fiscal earnings call by Jorgensen, Chief Executive Officer Andrew Wilson, and Vice President of Investor Relations Chris Evendan that were released Thurs
This new https://battlefield2042hq.com/ will come alongside FIFA 22 and Madden NFL 22 as major launches in the 2022 fiscal year, on top of other "new and ongoing live services and other titles." This will follow the release of new content "across a broad range of genres" that will invest in Sony's PlayStation 5 and Microsoft's Xbox Series X in the 2021 fiscal year; including four sports games, four games from older properties, four global releases of titles from smaller developers, and two new mobile ga
The next Battlefield game may have some stiff competition in the future, especially with Battlefield 5 's support ending this summer . There are a few key areas that DICE and EA could explore and change to bring the series back, hopefully bringing back a time where the " Call of Duty vs. Battlefield " arguments return. Until then, fans will have to see what's in store for Battlefield 6 in the fut
At the end of the day, Battlefield would benefit on giving the battle royale genre another shot. Assuming the support structure is there, plenty of lasting content is planned, and there's enough care put into the battle royale's beginning days, then there's no reason a Battlefield battle royale can't succeed or carve its own niche in the genre. Hopefully Firestorm and Battlefield V doesn't discourage DICE from giving the evergreen shooter genre another
To no fault of the Battlefield series as a whole, the mode simply fell flat due to its lack of evolution/innovation in a packed genre filled with different takes on the core mechanics. Part of that was Firestorm shared a lot of the problems that Battlefield 5 had overall as well. Regardless, the mode fell by the wayside as other core Battlefield modes had continued support. Now Battlefield 6 is aiming for a 2021 release, and another version of Firestorm may return. If that's true, the series will have plenty of contenders to battle for battle royale supremacy in the next-generat
For Battlefield to reignite the "who's better" arguments from its past, the franchise will need to seriously focus on what used to be the game's signature identity. Destructible environments have been a staple in Battlefield thanks to the graphically impressive physics in the Frostbite engine. It's never been taken out of the game per se, but with each new release the destruction has been taken out of the spotlight. Destruction was huge for Bad Company and Bad Company 2 because it was both free-flowing and integral to the map design. Battlefield 3 introduced "Levolution" to try and mix up the mechanic, but in turn made destruction much more linear and predictable. Reinventing a more unpredictable destruction system would be the perfect way to bring back classic Battlefield in a brand new fo