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Battlefield (video game series)

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Battlefield
Genre(s)First-person shooter
Developer(s)DICE
Other
Publisher(s)Electronic Arts
Creator(s)Johan Persson
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows, OS X, PlayStation 2, Xbox, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, Android, iOS, Kindle Fire
First releaseBattlefield 1942
September 10, 2002
Latest releaseBattlefield 2042
November 19, 2021

Battlefield is a military first-person shooter video game franchise primarily developed by Swedish company EA DICE and published by American company Electronic Arts. The series mainly focuses on online multiplayer, with gameplay taking place across large maps, and emphasizes teamwork and combined arms warfare.

The first installment of the franchise, Battlefield 1942, was released for Microsoft Windows and OS X computers in 2002. Since then, the series' installments have been played by more than 50 million players worldwide as of August 2012.[1][2]

Gameplay

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Battlefield series games usually focus on large-scale, online multiplayer battles. Playing in squads has become a major element of games in the series. Apart from infantry, tanks, airplanes, and other vehicles may participate in these battles.

Since Battlefield 2, the series centrally recorded online stats for each player, allowing users to receive rank promotions and weapon unlocks based on their performance as well as awards such as medals, ribbons, and pins.

A class system is present within all the Battlefield games. Each class features a different type of primary weapon along with different equipment, differentiating roles on the battlefield.

2008's Battlefield: Bad Company, in addition to expanding to the series to consoles, introduced full single-player campaigns with more fleshed-out storylines. It was also the first game to use the studio-developed game engine, Frostbite, which introduced almost fully destructible environments; a feature that has since become one of the most well-known staples of the series.

The ability to engage other players in melee combat with a knife has been present in Battlefield games, but since Battlefield 2142, the series has included an award of dog tags for each player killed using a knife.[3]

Games

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Titles in the Battlefield series
Year Engine Title Platform(s)
2002 Refractor 1 Battlefield 1942 Windows, Mac OS X
2003 Battlefield 1942: The Road to Rome
Battlefield 1942: Secret Weapons of WWII
2004 Battlefield Vietnam Windows
2005 Refractor 2 Battlefield 2
RenderWare Battlefield 2: Modern Combat PlayStation 2, Xbox, Xbox 360
Refractor 2 Battlefield 2: Special Forces Windows
2006 Battlefield 2: Euro Force
Battlefield 2: Armored Fury
Battlefield 2142 Windows, Mac OS X
2007 Battlefield 2142: Northern Strike
2008 Frostbite 1.0 Battlefield: Bad Company PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
2009 Refractor 2 Battlefield Heroes Windows
Frostbite 1.5 Battlefield 1943 PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
2010 Battlefield: Bad Company 2 Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Android, iOS
Battlefield: Bad Company 2: Vietnam Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
Refractor 2 Battlefield Online Windows
2011 Battlefield Play4Free
Frostbite 2 Battlefield 3 Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
Battlefield 3: Back to Karkand
2012 Battlefield 3: Close Quarters
Battlefield 3: Armored Kill
Battlefield 3: Aftermath
2013 Battlefield 3: End Game
Frostbite 3 Battlefield 4 Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, PlayStation 4, Xbox One
Battlefield 4: China Rising
2013/2014† Battlefield 4: Second Assault
2014 Battlefield 4: Naval Strike
Battlefield 4: Dragon's Teeth
Battlefield 4: Final Stand
2015 Battlefield 4: Weapons Crate
Battlefield 4: Night Operations
Battlefield 4: Community Operations
Battlefield 4: Legacy Operations Windows, PlayStation 4, Xbox One
Battlefield Hardline Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, PlayStation 4, Xbox One
Battlefield Hardline: Criminal Activity
Battlefield Hardline: Robbery
Battlefield Hardline: Blackout
2016 Battlefield Hardline: Getaway
Battlefield Hardline: Betrayal
Battlefield 1 Windows, PlayStation 4, Xbox One
2017 Battlefield 1: They Shall Not Pass
Battlefield 1: In the Name of the Tsar
Battlefield 1: Turning Tides
2018 Battlefield 1: Apocalypse
Battlefield V
Battlefield V: Overture
Battlefield V: Lightning Strikes
2019 Battlefield V: Trial by Fire
Battlefield V: Defying the Odds
Battlefield V: War in the Pacific
2020 Battlefield V: Into the Jungle
Battlefield V: Summer Update
2021 Frostbite[4] Battlefield 2042 Windows, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X and S
2022 Battlefield 2042: Zero Hour
Battlefield 2042: Master of Arms
Battlefield 2042: Escalation
2023 Battlefield 2042: Eleventh Hour
Battlefield 2042: New Dawn
Battlefield 2042: Dark Creations
2024 Battlefield 2042: Turning Point
Cancelled Unreal Engine 4 Battlefield Mobile Android, iOS
Notes:

■ DLC located directly below the title it was released for.

† Was released exclusively for Xbox One in 4th quarter 2013, then was released for the remaining platforms in 1st quarter 2014.[5]

Development history

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Aggregate review scores
Game Year Metacritic
Battlefield 1942 Edit this on Wikidata 2002 89/100[6]
Battlefield Vietnam Edit this on Wikidata 2004 84/100[7]
Battlefield 2 Edit this on Wikidata 2005 91/100[8]
Battlefield 2142 Edit this on Wikidata 2006 80/100[9]
Battlefield 3 Edit this on Wikidata 2011 PC: 89/100[10]
PS3: 85/100[11]
X360: 84/100[12]
Battlefield 4 Edit this on Wikidata 2013 PC: 81/100[13]
PS3: 80/100[14]
PS4: 85/100[15]
X360: 79/100[16]
XONE: 81/100[17]
Battlefield 1 Edit this on Wikidata 2016 PC: 88/100[18]
PS4: 89/100[19]
XONE: 87/100[20]
Battlefield V Edit this on Wikidata 2018 PC: 81/100[21]
PS4: 73/100[22]
XONE: 78/100[23]
Battlefield 2042 Edit this on Wikidata 2021 PC: 68/100[24]
PS5: 63/100[25]
XSX/S: 64/100[26]

Battlefield 1942 was released on September 10, 2002, using the Refractor game engine, and set in World War II. It introduced the "Conquest" gameplay mode, in which players fought for "control points" throughout the map. Two expansion packs were released.

Battlefield Vietnam, released in 2004, moved the setting to the Vietnam War, and was built on an updated Refractor engine with various gameplay improvements, such as the ability to fire personal weapons while seated in vehicles, and visualizing dense foliage.

The 2005 release Battlefield 2 takes place in the modern day, depicting a war between the United States and China and the fictional Middle Eastern Coalition (MEC). Despite requiring numerous patches due to a large number of bugs and glitches in the game upon its release, it was a large commercial success, selling more than 2,250,000 copies worldwide, by July 2006.[27] One expansion pack, Special Forces, which added Russia, exclusive missions, and new weapons and gadgets, and two booster packs, Armored Fury (adding three new battles in the USA) and Euro Force (adding the European Union), were also released. A similar game called Battlefield 2: Modern Combat was released for consoles, with a larger single player mode but limited online play.

Battlefield 2142 was released in 2006, taking place during a global ice age in the 22nd century. While most of it is graphically similar to Battlefield 2, it introduced a variety of equipment to unlock and battles between two giant "Titan" airships. The Northern Strike expansion pack was later released, adding new maps, vehicles, and a new game mode. Its use of in-game advertising was controversial among players and not well received.[28]

Battlefield: Bad Company, released in 2008, is set in a near-future war between the United States and Russia, and follows a US Army company's escapades and their search for hidden gold. This new Battlefield game had a variety of vehicles for land, air and sea. It had a new destruction system that allowed the player to break and destroy environments, based on a new game engine named Frostbite, which replaced the Refractor engine used in earlier releases (with the exception of Battlefield 2: Modern Combat, which used RenderWare).

In 2009, EA released two download-only games, Battlefield Heroes, a free-to-play Refractor 2 engine game, supported by advertising and micropayments and Battlefield 1943, a Frostbite engine game, released in July 2009, for Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3, and was scheduled for release in Q1 2010, for PCs, but was cancelled.[29]

In 2010, a sequel to Battlefield: Bad Company, Battlefield: Bad Company 2, was released, involving "B" Company's search for an electromagnetic pulse weapon. It features a larger multiplayer than its predecessor Bad Company, with updated graphics and realistic effects (e.g. bullet-drop). The game introduced the rush game mode and brought in weapons. It features a "VIP" system of content distribution where player with VIP codes gain early access to new maps. DICE also released an expansion for Bad Company 2, Battlefield: Bad Company 2: Vietnam, setting the game in the Vietnam War.

Battlefield 3 was announced in 2009,[30][31] and in 2010 it was confirmed that gamers who pre-ordered Medal of Honor Limited Edition would receive Battlefield 3 forty-eight hours before the open beta was released. On February 4, 2011, the first teaser trailer for the game was revealed, with a preliminary release in the Fall of 2011.[32] Among the features that remain in the game are Jets and the ability to go prone. The game allows 64 (on the PC) players as in all previous Battlefield titles, though the consoles allow for 24-player matches. The Battlefield 3 Beta was released on September 29, 2011.[33] Battlefield 3 was released on October 25, 2011 and has received high review scores and has received awards from IGN.

On November 5, 2010, EASY Studios announced a follow-up to its free-to-play Battlefield Heroes, Battlefield Play4Free. EASY develops the free-to-play variants of Battlefield. Its latest offering gives players the same free-to-play pricing structure of Heroes, while still offering a more serious, core Battlefield experience (as opposed to Heroes' lighthearted, cartoon-styled environment).[34] Battlefield Play4Free went into open beta on April 4, 2011.[35]

Players playing Battlefield 4 for Xbox

Battlefield 4 was announced on March 26, 2013. On July 17, 2012, it was announced that players who pre-order Medal of Honor: Warfighter would receive access to a Battlefield 4 beta. The beta for the game began on October 1 and ended on October 15 with a full release on October 29, 2013.

Information about the next entry in the series, Battlefield Hardline, was leaked on May 27, 2014, and officially unveiled on June 9, 2014, during E3. The game was developed by Visceral Games and, unlike previous installments in the franchise, is centered around a cops-and-robbers theme.

Battlefield: Bad Company 3 was an upcoming entry into the series, a follow-up to 2010's Battlefield: Bad Company 2.[36][37] General Manager of DICE, Karl-Magnus Troedsson stated in a 2014 interview with Eurogamer that the game is not in active development as the studio doesn't know what exactly fans loved about the series as there has never been a clear line of the matter and they do not want to risk destroying the series.[38] Despite this, DICE has made it clear that they will be developing Bad Company 3 at some point.[39]

In July 2015, CFO of EA Blake Jorgensen announced a new Battlefield title would be released in 2016.[40][41][42] This was followed up by Dan Vaderlind, EA DICE Development Director, announcing that since Star Wars Battlefront has been released, he will now be focused on the upcoming Battlefield title.[43] On May 6, 2016, Battlefield 1 was officially announced, with an official reveal trailer on YouTube, and was released on October 21, 2016.[44][45]

In a May 2018 live reveal event it was confirmed that it the next installment would be a World War II game after several leaks suggested it would be set during this period, with the title revealed as Battlefield V.[46] Battlefield V was released later that year on November 20, 2018 while also offering certain players early access to the game as early as November 9, 2018.[47]

Battlefield 2042 was released on November 19, 2021. During EA's 2020/2021 Q3 earnings call it was revealed that the game will be the first to release on PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S, utilizing their processing power to feature more players than ever in the online portion of the game.[48] Additionally, it saw multiple innovations in multiplayer, social, and competition aspects that are new to the franchise.[49] After 2042 was met with a poor launch, it was announced that Oskar Gabrielson, the general manager of DICE, would be stepping down from his position, and Rebecka Coutaz, former Managing Director of Ubisoft Annecy, would replace him. Vince Zampella of Respawn Entertainment and Ripple Effect Studios (the latter of which had created 2042's Portal Mode) will be heading the Battlefield franchise. It was also reported that EA game director Marcus Lehto is building a new Seattle-based studio focused on story content for Battlefield, while Ripple Effect is developing a new "Battlefield experience" set in the game's universe.[50]

Battlefield Mobile was a cancelled free-to-play game for the Android, with an iOS release initially planned before the game's cancellation on January 31, 2023. An open beta was released in November 2022.[51] The game was cancelled on January 31, 2023. The developer of the game, Industrial Toys, was also shut down.[52]

TV series

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In October 2012, Fox Broadcasting Company announced their intentions to make a one-hour-long television show based on Battlefield: Bad Company.[53] The show was to be written by executive producer John Eisendrath and co-produced by Patrick Bach and Patrick O'Brien of Electronic Arts, and Doug Robinson of Happy Madison. Nothing has been developed after their announcement.[54]

In July 2016, Paramount Television announced that it will adapt the game series for television. Anonymous Content's Michael Sugar and Ashley Zalta will executive produce.[55]

References

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