Battlefield 6 Developers Have Been “Cooking Some Improvements” to Fix Recoil Issues

Despite ongoing updates and support for Battlefield 2042, the developers at EA and Battlefield Studios haven’t yet been able to fix issues with the game’s gun recoil. Lead game designer Florian Le Bihan recently shared an update on social media, explaining that the team is still actively working on a solution.

Responding to player feedback about the recoil in Battlefield 6, a developer at Battlefield Studios acknowledged they’re working on improvements. While the issue isn’t fully resolved yet, they’ve made progress and are planning further updates to significantly improve the experience until a complete fix is available. They described the problem as complex but assured players they are actively addressing it.

Many Battlefield 6 fans have thanked the developers for listening to the community. Some players have also offered ideas to help fix a specific problem, with one suggesting the developers revert to the recoil system used in the game’s beta and playtests.

Today, Battlefield Studios and EA launched a free trial for Battlefield 6. While it’s not the complete game, the trial runs until December 2nd and lets players experience 5 game modes on 3 different maps – enough to give them a feel for the full game and potentially encourage a purchase.

Starting later this month, players will get a free chance to play Battlefield 6. From November 25th to December 2nd, a free trial will be available, letting you experience the game’s multiplayer action on five different modes and three maps. It’s a full week to try out Battlefield 6 without paying anything!

A free trial of Battlefield 6 was launched with the second big update for Season 1. Called California Resistance, the update introduced a new map set in Southern California, called Eastwood, and a temporary game mode called Sabotage. The update also included several improvements, notably changes to how aim assist functions.

The developers have adjusted the aim assist feature to perform as it did during the open beta and Battlefield Labs tests. They initially increased the slowdown at long distances after launch, but player feedback showed this made aiming with high zoom levels feel clunky and difficult to control, so they’ve reverted the change.

Based on what players told us and how the game was played, we’re going back to the aim assist settings many of you liked during the Open Beta and Battlefield Labs. This will be the standard experience, but you’ll still be able to customize aim assist to fit how you like to play in the settings menu.

Battlefield 6 is now available on PC, PlayStation 5, and Xbox Series X/S. Since launching last month, it’s become the best-selling game of 2025 in the United States. It also appears to have impacted initial sales of Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 in Europe.

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2025-11-25 15:41