Battlefield 6 Review - Good Company
Briefly

Battlefield 6 Review - Good Company
"At its best, Battlefield 6 is everything you could ask for from a Battlefield game. Intense, close-quarters firefights transition into long-range skirmishes as control points change hands and the action moves from the tight confines of half-destroyed buildings to open stretches of land. As fighter jets and helicopters swoop overhead, a medic pulls out a defibrillator and rushes into a hail of bullets to revive a squadmate who was just blown up trying to destroy a tank with a handful of C4."
"Elsewhere, a sniper taking residence in a high-rise building is snuffed out by a well-placed RPG, blowing a hole in their nest until the entire building eventually collapses in on itself, while just a few yards away, the burnt husk of a helicopter drops out of the sky as its previous occupants parachute to the ground amidst a salvo of gunfire. Battlefield 6 is a return to form for a multiplayer shooter that thrives on emergent chaos."
"It's well-documented that Battlefield 3 and 4 were key inspirations in designing the series' latest iteration, and that's certainly reflected in how it plays. It's a safe approach, which isn't surprising given the negative reception to Battlefield 2042, especially when so many fans have been clamoring for a direct sequel to the series' fourth mainline entry. As a result, there's very little about Battlefield 6 that feels particularly fresh or new,"
Battlefield 6 delivers intense, shifting combat that moves from close-quarters firefights to long-range skirmishes as control points change hands. Large-scale moments include jets and helicopters overhead, medics reviving squadmates under fire, snipers being eliminated by RPGs, collapsing buildings, and helicopters being shot down as occupants parachute into gunfire. The multiplayer design draws heavily on Battlefield 3 and 4, resulting in familiar mechanics and emergent chaos. The development team deliberately revisited earlier entries after Battlefield 2042's shortcomings. The game prioritizes a return to the series' core multiplayer identity over innovation, producing quintessential Battlefield thrills but offering little novelty. The single-player campaign does not replicate that success.
Read at GameSpot
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