Is Delta Force Cross Platform?
Yep, Delta Force supports crossplay on various platforms. You can squad up (or talk trash) with folks playing on PC, PlayStation 5, or Xbox Series X|S, thanks to full cross-platform support at launch.
Delta Force' is now available for PS5 and Xbox, with cross-play support for the PC version
That "awkward moment" when your friend buys the game on a different system? It’s gone. Honestly, the last time I tried wrangling my friends into a shooter, two had Xboxes, one was a PS5 loyalist, and I was stuck clocking hours on Steam. This sort of crossplay still feels like a small miracle.
Sure, you’ll have to toggle your crossplay settings if you’re worried about keyboard-mouse "beasts" in sweaty lobbies—console players can stick together or invite the PC crowd. Not everything’s sunshine, though; mobile users are fenced off in their own pool, so don’t expect to play with that one cousin who refuses to buy a console. Little bummer, but if I had to face touch controls, I’d want my own league too.
Delta Force Xbox: Launch, Features & Vibes
It’s live on Xbox Series X|S, released August 19, 2025. And—get this—it’s free-to-play, all modes included. That includes the new 32v32 Warfare, the ultra-tense Operations extraction mode, and a nostalgic Black Hawk Down PvE campaign. It’s not on Game Pass, but you get some bonus goodies if you subscribe, which feels like the devs are gently winking at Xbox fans without fully marrying Game Pass.
- Console launch: Aug 19, 2025.
- Download size: 97.84GB. Seriously, check your hard drive.
- Modes: Extraction, Warfare (think "giant battles"), Black Hawk Down campaign.
- Performance: 60FPS on launch; higher rates coming for PS5 Pro. You can tweak vertical sync, switch between quality and performance modes.
It’s one of those launches where you get the "premium" content right out of the gate, with big, messy firefights that feel just rowdy enough—though sometimes matchmaking still throws you a curveball.
Players would have received rich rewards at launch:
Delta Force PS5 Edition: Smooth, Custom, and (Sort of) Nostalgic
Delta Force is back on PlayStation—after a loooong hiatus. Released for PS5 on August 19, 2025, it’s entirely free-to-play and features the same big modes as Xbox, along with some platform-exclusive skins and membership rewards for PlayStation Plus subscribers.
If you’re itching for that Hollywood thrill, the Black Hawk Down-inspired campaign is ready to download for free, blending memories of classic shooters and late-night movie marathons.
Delta Force Cross Progression
Here’s the deal: progression is unified across PC, PlayStation, Xbox, and even mobile—yes, all your operators, skins, and rewards stay glued to your account. It’s called "account syncing," and it works so well I wish more games had this. Picture: you unlock a slick weapon skin on PS5, jump to PC for late-night runs, then swap back to Xbox for a couch co-op.
As long as you’ve set up your Level Infinite Pass (LiPass) and linked your accounts, you’re perpetually loaded no matter which platform you boot up. I fumbled through two menus and a Discord login before finally getting all my stuff; awkward, but ultimately satisfying—no bitter reset or "starting over" drama.
You will have to set cross-progression up—don’t expect it to work out of the box unless you link those accounts. It’s not a pain, just... mildly annoying for anyone who hates login screens.
Delta Force Game: The Whole Package
Delta Force is now a free-to-play, cross-platform shooter with deep PvP, massive Warfare battles, and a faithful Black Hawk Down campaign. All the modes are available from launch, and the devs have ditched pay-to-win, focusing on competitive balance and customisation. Console-specific rewards (like weapon skins and battle pass events) feel like a nice cherry on top—a little bonus for joining on your favourite system.
What’s it really like? It’s not revolutionizing shooters overnight, but it does make crossplay, big squads, and cross-progression nearly frictionless. Kind of feels like the grown-up version of running to your neighbor’s house just so you could play the same game together.
You can toggle crossplay off if you’re tired of PC savants, but for most, it’s honestly liberating. Just remember: clean your hard drive first, stock up on caffeine (the lobbies go wild at midnight), and maybe brace yourself for a few spicy, cross-platform rivalries.