Battlefield 6 Will Kick Off its First Season With Covert Operations

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Battlefield Studios and EA no doubt have quite a few plans when it comes to post-launch updates for upcoming shooter Battlefield 6. In a new email that EA has sent out to users with EA accounts, the company has confirmed that among the post-launch content headed for the game are “covert operations”. As caught by Mp1st, no real details about these covert operations have been confirmed so far

The name indicates that it might be an entirely new game mode, and it could even be similar to Call of Duty’s co-op PvE modes, dubbed Special Ops. However, covert operations could also simply be nothing more than a fancier way to refer to weekly and daily objectives that players will get rewarded for completing.

Along with covert operations, Battlefield 6 is also slated to get a host of other new content, including new weapons, vehicles and maps. “New maps, modes, weapons and covert operations set the stage for Battlefield 6’s first season,” wrote the company in its email. “Your Season One intel is here.”

The first season for Battlefield 6 will be kicked off on October 28, and will bring with it the Blackwell Fields map as part of Rogue Ops. The season will also bring with it the Strikepoint game mode, which is designed for 4-on-4 combat and takes place across multiple rounds with each player only having a single life in each round. Season 1 will consist of two more content drops: California Resistance on November 18 and Winter Offensive on December 9.

California Resistance will bring with it the Eastwood map, along with the 8-on-8 Sabotage game mode, the introduction of the Battle Pickups feature, and new weapons like the DB-12 Shotgun. Winter Offensive, on the other hand, will see a limited-time update to the Empire State map, freezing its water and forcing players to once more experience the battleground with an all-new perspective. The update will also bring with it the Ice Climbing Axe melee weapon, as well as the limited-time Ice Lock event that revolves around a new mechanic called Freeze.

Battlefield 6 is slated for release on PC, PS5 and Xbox Series X/S on October 10, and is getting closer to its launch date with quite a bit of hype behind it. Some analysts even believe that it will mark a new era for the Battlefield franchise, with analysis firm and data supplier Ampere even stating that it will end up selling 5 million copies across all platforms in its first week alone.

This statement comes after the firm looked at the popularity of the Battlefield 6 open betas, which was estimated to have gotten 22 million players. Other estimates have put the open betas at an even higher player count of around 25 million players. These numbers are well beyond what the beta for Battlefield 2042 got, which was able to hit 5.1 million concurrent players, compared to Battlefield 6 beta’s 10.4 million.

For more details about Battlefield 6, also check out information about its single-player campaign.

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After EA buyout, former exec calls its huge teams "counterproductive"

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Arc Raiders developer Embark is a studio made up of lots of ex-EA and DICE execs and devs, all tired of FPS games and ready to do something different, something for themselves. It's a tale I've been hearing more and more often in recent years, as developers at massive companies find more creative freedom, satisfaction, and often security by going it alone. From the tiniest independent narrative games to the kind of cultural behemoth that Arc Raiders promises to become, the traditional method of game development is fast growing stale.

Read the full story on PCGamesN: After EA buyout, former exec calls its huge teams "counterproductive"



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Amazon Strikes Samsung SSDs Hard, Now the 2TB 990 PRO SSD Is Selling at a New Record Low

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Samsung 990 Pro Ssd 2tb

It’s among the most powerful internal SSDs of 2025.

The post Amazon Strikes Samsung SSDs Hard, Now the 2TB 990 PRO SSD Is Selling at a New Record Low appeared first on Kotaku.

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Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 lead writer says "there is no correct ending" to the French JRPG: "Both are heartbreaking in their own ways"

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Warning: Spoilers ahead. If you've managed to complete French breakout hit RPG Clair Obscur: Expedition 33, you'll know there are two possible endings. After making your way through the sweeping story inspired by the Belle Époque era, a single choice dictates which of the conclusions you get to see.

Naturally, such a pronounced fork in the road has inspired much debate among players about which ending is ‘canon’ or ‘right’, because ambiguity is bad, apparently, and everything needs to be definitive. According to Sandfall Interactive’s Jennifer Sverberg-Yen, the lead writer on Clair Obscur, such discussion is the opposite of what was intended.

"I tell everyone there is no correct ending, there is no canon ending, there is no official Sandfall ending," she explained during an interview with Lits Play. "Both endings are there for a reason, we put them both there for a reason, they were designed in a very particular way. Neither is perfect. Both are heartbreaking in their own ways."

She's definitely got a point there. The climax comes down to a battle between siblings Verso and Alicia, and whichever one you choose defines the outcome to a substantial degree. Each comes at a cost to characters you've grown to empathize with, and neither is clear-cut emotionally or ethically.

They reject neatness in a deliberate way, to mirror the imperfections we face in our own dilemmas. "Both of them have parts of them that make you glad, that make you feel like 'I want a happy ending for these characters,' but both of them have their own cost," she says. "It's a reflection of reality, a lot of times, some people's happiness does come with its cost, things are rarely perfect."

Sverberg-Yen adds that she and creative director Guillaume Broche actively resisted a "story that was just good versus evil" from quite early in the development process. They wanted a paradigm where all points of view were understandable, as opposed to more contrived, archetypal tales of goodies and baddies.

"In this instance, we wanted to focus on the fact that because both sides care, they have different perspectives on how best to move forward. They care about each other, and they care about each other's future," she muses, later adding: "The player can decide for themselves what is the right ending based upon their own perspective."

While this probably won't stifle much discourse, it's refreshing to hear devs be unashamedly bold in their narrative choices. However you choose to finish Clair Obscur is the right way - besides, it's the journey that matters.

After the president of France, Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 has earned a nod from a hugely popular French MMO that references one of its many heart-wrenching twists



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Amazon Kept Everyone Waiting, but the Echo Dot Is Now Almost Free for Prime Day

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Amazon Echo Dot 2022

The cheapest way to get Alexa.

The post Amazon Kept Everyone Waiting, but the Echo Dot Is Now Almost Free for Prime Day appeared first on Kotaku.

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Good Boy: The most surprising horror movie of 2025 came from a very personal fear

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Good Boy is a horror movie unlike any other. We’ve seen haunted house movies, but instead of focusing on screaming teens or fearless ghost investigators, it’s told from the perspective of a dog. (A Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever, to be precise.) In Good Boy, Indy the pup must protect his owner as supernatural forces close in on their remote cabin.



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21 hours ago
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