Forum Discussion
Ok at least EA/Dice listening a bit. They just added "casual breakthrough". It is an official mode 16 real players and 32 bots witch full xp and weapon progression. Just it doesn't count for kd.
I know its not full pve but better than nothing. It will give an opportunity do actually do something on the game :) Lets try it :)
- Baertiges_Recht2 months agoNew Vanguard
Full xp for the pvp kills, 10% for bots.
- ElliotLH2 months agoHero+
Yes, I've been enjoying it a lot. It's effectively a rebranded Breakthrough Initiation.
- TheLoliAssassin2 months agoSeasoned Adventurer
Casual Breakthrough is not the answer here. It is barely an improvement over Initiation and only has 2 maps. It's also still forcing PVP, EA is clearly hoping people will use it for, at most, casual warmups before moving to full PVP.
If we let them get us back into the game with Casual Breakthrough they will never give us what we really want.
At this point the only answers I will accept is the return of the pure PVE Coop mode from 2042 or the full return of Portal to how it was at launch, any other compromise is not acceptable.- IamSharkx2 months agoRising Ace
It's very simple, at launch Bf6 was announced with full XP and progression in Verified Portal Experiences. Now EA has removed XP/progression and removed the bots entirely. That breaks what was announced for anyone who bought the game expecting it. This is a breach of contract, so either they refund everyone that bought the game based on their claim or they reverse their wrongdoing.
- MiRoz812 months agoRising Scout
Unfortunatelly no. EA legally can remove or change parts of Battlefield 6, even features that were promoted before launch (like bots in Portal with full progression).
when you “buy” the game, you’re not actually purchasing the product itself — you’re purchasing a license to use EA’s software and services. That license comes with specific terms you agree to when you start the game.According to EA’s User Agreement:
“EA may modify, suspend, discontinue, replace, or limit access to any EA Service, or any portion thereof, at any time, without notice or liability to you.”This means EA can change or remove features whenever they want, and as long as the game still functions in some form, it’s fully within their rights. It might feel dishonest from a player’s perspective, but from a legal standpoint, it’s all covered by the license we agreed to.
The only cases where this could become illegal would be if EA advertised something that never existed at all, or if they completely shut down access to the game you paid for. But removing or altering content — even heavily advertised content — is allowed under the current terms.
So yes, sadly We don’t “own” Battlefield 6 — we’re just renting the right to play it. EA keeps full control over the content and can change it at will. It’s frustrating, but unfortunately, it’s 100% legal.