Futuristic Battlefield 2042 Out In October, Supports 128 Players

But last-gen versions of the game will only support 64 players

battlefield 2042
Screenshot: EA / YouTube

The rumors were true. The next Battlefield game, Battlefield 2042, is set in the future, EA announced during a digital showcase today that started after a “countdown to a countdown.” A gameplay reveal is scheduled for June 13. The game releases October 22 for Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S, PS4, PS5, and PC.

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In Battlefield 2042, United States is locked in a cold war with—and, given the series’ history, you’ll never guess this—Russia. Maps, of which there will be seven at the start, can host up to 128 players, a significant increase over the 64-player limit in recent entries. (Matches on PS4 and Xbox One will still be limited to 64 players.) Oh, yeah, and there are robot dogs. And wingsuits.

Here’s a cinematic trailer:

An open beta is scheduled for an unspecified future date. According to the terms and conditions, your character data will not transfer over to the main game.

Battlefield 2042 isn’t the first Battlefield to take place in the future. Battlefield 2142, released in 2006, takes place during a futuristic cold war set amid the backdrop of a new ice age.

Perhaps no game in the E3 2021 press cycle has spent more time in the rumor mill than Battlefield 2042. Over the past few weeks, a steady drip-feed of screenshots and speculation has plastered the internet. Just this morning, as GameSpot reports, leakers on Reddit posted apparent leaks from Origin, EA’s digital games storefront, suggesting some juicy details for the first-person shooter.

But the most meaningful change, per the leaks, is the new specialist system, which was not detailed in today’s reveal. Recent Battlefield games have allowed you to play as one of four classes—Recon, Support, Assault, or Medic—that dictated what weapons and gear you could start with. In Battlefield 2042, that’s gone. The specialist you choose features two specific perks, but the rest of your loadout is entirely customizable.

EA’s stream was initially scheduled for 10:00 a.m. ET. Once it officially “started,” a countdown—this one an hour long—kicked off. On Battlefield’s official YouTube channel, right before the stream began, north of 360,000 people were tuned in. Within a few minutes, that dipped below 200,000. “HOLY SMOKES LETS GOO!!!!!” one commenter wrote in the chat at 10:00 a.m. ET on the dot. “WOW COUNTDOWN”

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Staff Writer, Kotaku

DISCUSSION

lukegarou
LukeGarou

I really hate that the countdown to a countdown seems to be the new trend. Ubisoft and EA have both done it, and Sony kind of did it too (but at least they were upfront about it), and I don’t expect it to stop.

That said, I am excited for the new Battlefield. Thought the specialist system intrigues and maybe concerns me? That’s a pretty big shakeup to the gameplay that hasn’t changed in a very long time. Here’s hoping the gameplay reveal allays some of those fears.