Days after the release of Call of Duty: BO7, BF6 claims 2025's "best selling shooter" crown.
There's no denying it: Battlefield 6 has proven to be a smash hit for publisher Electronic Arts (EA) and developer Battlefield Studios, and the FPS is still drawing in thousands upon thousands of players over a month after launch. At release, it blew up the Steam charts with nearly 750K concurrent players, sold a gargantuan 7 million copies in just three days, and scored highly on Metacritic with widespread positive reviews.
That copies sold metric, in particular — as well as the fact that Battlefield 6 held the #1 position on Steam's Top Sellers list for weeks — is indicative of the fact that the game has been a massive commercial success for EA, at least in its opening month. Indeed, 7 million sales in three days is a majorly impressive achievement, and I do not doubt that sales since then have continued to be strong.
Though Battlefield 6 has a lead right now since it's been out for a lot longer, I wouldn't be surprised if Black
Ops 7 catches up and surpasses the game's performance in time. Nothing ever seems to sell quite like Call of Duty does.
(Image credit: Xbox Game Studios)
I don't doubt that it's true right now, but it's a bold declaration to make so soon after the launch of Call of Duty: Black Ops 7. Treyarch and Raven Software's new FPS came out just under a week ago, after all, and Call of Duty is well known for being a juggernaut in the genre that consistently achieves chart-topping sales with its annual releases. It's a huge reason why Microsoft's acquisition of publisher Activision Blizzard cost nearly $69 billion.
Though Battlefield 6 has a lead, right now, it's not exactly hard to imagine a world in which Black Ops 7 catches up in the coming weeks and eventually surpasses the performance of EA's large-scale FPS. Call of Duty simply has a hold over the mainstream market that only a select few other franchises can claim to enjoy — and mainstream, well-known properties like it tend to sell incredibly well in the rapidly approaching holiday season.
Though Battlefield 6 has a lead, right now, it's not exactly hard to imagine a world in which Black Ops 7 catches up in the coming weeks. With that said, however, I actually wouldn't be surprised if Battlefield 6 manages to hold onto its crown, either.
With that said, however, I actually wouldn't be surprised if Battlefield 6 manages to hold onto its crown, either. It's a huge return to form for EA's shooter series after several disappointing releases (ahem, Battlefield 2042), complete with creative new class gadgets for reshaping the battlefield, incredibly advanced destruction physics, a wide variety of maps and modes, and a grounded military aesthetic that stands in contrast to the wackier, more fantastical visuals and cosmetics of today's Call of Duty.
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