Battlefield 6 Beta End Time
If you were in the beta, you’ll have seen three maps in action right away—Liberation Peak, Siege of Cairo, and Iberian Offensive. Liberation Peak stood out, offering that perfect mix of sniping angles, sandbagged choke points, and actual air and ground play; you’d get jets and helis alongside tough tank drives. Siege of Cairo was a hectic, alley‑lined scramble—it felt like the old-school urban scrappers of Battlefield 3, tight quarters with little breathing room. Iberian Offensive was more of a sprawling town layout—nice destructibility, tanks still mattered, but nothing that stuck in your brain quite like the other two.
The first beta weekend end at 1 a.m. Pacific time on August 11, 2025, and the final one does the same at 1 a.m. Pacific on August 17, 2025—which works out to roughly mid‑day in India, late evening for much of Europe.
Gameplay was lean and in-your-face. Mapped modes like Breakthrough and Conquest let teams push through objectives, with Liberation Peak being the only one that handled full vehicle assaults, while the rest kept fights tighter, more infantry-driven. I heard chatter over wave after wave of foot soldiers sneaking through rubble, while nearby jet trails cut through the sky—classic Battlefield chaos, but focused and intense.
I’m not ignoring the bugs—they were there. Some days, the revive system felt a little wonky, and placement on Siege of Cairo was a straight-up nightmare when MAV-style spotting got funky. Still, most folks logged back in for more—either for the thrills or because walking away mid‑shift was harder than hopping back on.
Now, here’s the kicker: we already know the full launch will land on October 10, 2025. If these beta weekends are any sign, expect high-impact moments, short-lived dominance, and maybe a few hot headshots that go down in stream lore.