Some new and important Battlefield 6 details were revealed by a prominent Battle field insider. Unfortunately, there is no word on a release or disclosure date, but the report does provide some interesting information. For example, he says the game will support cross-game play between PS5, Xbox Series X and PC when it is released. However, while revealing this, the report casts doubts about the game’s release on PS4 and Xbox One, noting that if EA goes ahead and releases next-generation versions of the game, they will be incorporated into this cross-play support. The report does not openly say in one way or another whether the game is coming to PS4 and Xbox One, but the language used suggests that it has not yet been finalized.
Furthermore, the account, which comes in the manner of Tom Henderson, Battlefield 6 is taking “levolution” to the next level, or as Henderson puts it, it has levolution “on steroids”. What this means is that players will be able to destroy most buildings in the game, as long as there are no objectives in them. And this system is so advanced and complex that the building will fall in different directions depending on where it is being compromised, which makes it look like there will be a strategic element in destroying buildings.
Moving on, Henderson says the squads are returning with four members and the ability to create “units” by accumulating squads. To this end, the assault, support, recon and engineering classes are back.
Henderson says the game will make use of a Battle Pass and Seasons structure, with seasons planned to last 8 to 10 weeks.
Finally, Henderson reveals that there will be some free-to-play element in the game, which will likely come in the form of a battle royale mode, or at least something like a battle royale mode.
Unfortunately, this is where the report ends. At the moment, none of this has been verified or debunked by a comment from EA or Dice. Until that happens, make sure to take everything with a grain of salt since nothing here is official. Furthermore, while the source is reliable and it is easy to assume that everything here is correct, it is also subject to change.