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The four most important leaks you need to know about Battlefield 6 as we edge closer to the game's reveal
Game Reviews

The four most important leaks you need to know about Battlefield 6 as we edge closer to the game’s reveal

by admin June 24, 2025


If you’re eager to devour any piece of Battlefield 6 news you can get your hands on, you’re likely feeling down now that Summer Game Fest season has come and gone without a single mention of the highly-anticipated shooter.

Following the conclusion of a fairly controversial Battlefield Labs playtest that look place at the end of May, players had theorised that we’re close to getting some sort of major news, initially suspecting 17th June as a significant date.

We’re a week past that, now, and developer DICE showed nothing to whet our appetites. All we’ve had are leaks.


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Players invited to previous Battlefield Labs playtests were recently surprised to see more tests scheduled, when most players keeping up with the in-development title believed tests would be suspended until a major update had been released.

These June playtests introduced an updated version of the Domination game mode, which had some very Call of Duty-like ideas, such as the ability to respawn immediately without having to wait for a revive. This is unusual for a Battlefield game.

Beyond that, there are some pretty big changes to the Battlefield norm afoot in the Labs playtests, to date. Here are some of the most interesting changes and ideas we’ve seen in Battlefield 6 so far, based on what we know from the in-development tests.

Weapons

One of the most celebrated aspects of these fresh leaks relates to the number of weapons dug up in the playtest’s files. Respected dataminer, temporyal, recently posted a collection of all weapons referenced in the game’s files – a total of 52, split across eight categories.

Only a handful of those weapons were included in past Labs playtests, so there’s a chance we may not end up seeing everything on that list in the launch build of Battlefield 6, but considering Battlefield 2042’s anemic arsenal at launch, things are looking much better for the next game so far.

Just how different is Battlefield 6 going to be compared to 2042? We shouldn’t have too much longer to wait to find out. | Image credit: EA

Battle Royale

Battle royale findings have been persistent across all recent builds – and reports suggesting there’ll be a BR mode in the game have certainly helped – even if hard information is rare at this time. We do know that some of the studios behind Battlefield 6 are each working on separate modes, one of which is strongly believed to be a modern iteration of Firestorm: Battlefield’s forgotten battle royale mode.

Firestorm debuted with Battlefield 5, but a big reason it never caught onis because it was locked behind a purchase of the full game, and not free-to-play like Call of Duty: Warzone or, indeed, most battle royale games. Rectifying this is something EA is supposedly keen to correct with Battlefield 6’s take on the mode, and recent leaks appear to suggest the mode will operate separately from the core game, and that it won’t require a copy of the full release to access. Meaning, one can assume, it will be free-to-play.

A Battlefield Labs June patch included some new art and various bits of text that reference Firestorm, which supposedly takes place following an explosion in a place called Fort Lyndon (likely the map’s name, in the same way Warzone has become synonymous with Verdansk). The size of the recent patch might also indicate that DICE is keen on testing the BR mode soon, so we’ll have to see if that ends up happening with the next few Labs playtests.

How different will BF6’s implementation of the battle royale Firestorm mode be? | Image credit: EA

Campaign

One of the next game’s much less-discussed aspects is its narrative campaign, which we know practically nothing about. The recent patch, however, included a video from one of the game’s campaign missions, which supposedly shows the end of a narrative segment in which a squad of soldiers destroy a dam in Tajikistan.

The video has multiple unfinished assets, and is very much work-in-progress. But it’s something, at least, offering hope to the players that want a return to classic Battlefield campaigns.

Many are hoping for a different approach to the campaign, this time around.

The official title of Battlefield 6

Most of the discoveries we covered so far are part of the fairly large updates BF Labs has recently received. One of the most interesting, however, points to the official title of the game – and that does appear to be, simply, Battlefield 6.

It’s worth noting that EA Play and all official/player-facing areas of the Battlefield Labs tests do not show Battlefield 6 as the title, but the June updates have added strings of code across several areas of the game that all use that moniker when referring to the game, strongly indicating that DICE and EA have finally settled on an official name for the first-person shooter.

Those updates also coincided with tweaks to some of the Labs language to indicate that the game had moved from pre-alpha into alpha, which players believe paves the road for a more public test soon – though that’s not a new theory.

At least it’s not going to be called just ‘Battlefield’ (…in theory). | Image credit: EA

It’s clear we’re inching closer to the game’s proper reveal. EA confirmed in May that the next Battlefield will be unveiled in the summer. Seeing as June is almost over, a July reveal is the next best bet, (unless the game’s reveal party is instead planned for gamescom in August).

Until then, more Battlefield playtests will only result in more datamining and more leaks, so we’ll have to use those for sustenance while we wait for official channels to start waking up.



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June 24, 2025 0 comments
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The first plausible Sony handheld specs leaks emerge - but how capable can it be?
Game Updates

The first plausible Sony handheld specs leaks emerge – but how capable can it be?

by admin June 17, 2025


Quietly in the background, plausible technical specifications for Sony’s next generation handheld have come to light. Bearing in mind that we’re likely years away from release, the plausibility of these specs has to be questioned but at the same time, the source of the leak – KeplerL2 – has proven to be a highly reliable source for all sorts of AMD information. He was also first to corroborate the PlayStation 5 Pro spec leaks and his information turned out to be very, very close to what we received as final hardware. His Sony handheld specs are unusually detailed for a project so far out, but to be fair, they do lack highly important context: the chip at the heart of the machine is built on AMD’s new graphics architecture – known by some as UDNA – but nobody quite knows what it is capable of. Therefore, getting a grip on what this machine is capable of will prove challenging.

Based on Kepler’s information though, the in-development APU has 16 UDNA compute units and 32 ROPs – similar in configuration terms to the Strix Point processor we’ll see this year in the ROG Xbox Ally X and the plethora of Chinese handhelds built on existing versions of the same core processor. There are key differences though – and these could prove crucial.

First of all, as mentioned, the Sony handheld’s use of the UDNA architecture gives it a generational leap or two over Strix Point, which is using RDNA 3.5. Secondly, memory bandwidth has historically been a defining limiting factor for AMD handhelds – it’s one of the key reasons why Steam Deck continues to measure up fairly well against much more modern AMD-based handhelds. According to Kepler’s information, Sony attempts to address this with two improvements: faster LPDDR5X memory (9600MT/s vs 8000MT/s) along with an additional memory cache on the processor itself: 16MB of MALL (Memory Access at Last Level) cache. This will deliver one third of existing PS5 bandwidth, but the MALL plus architectural improvements should make a difference.

Sony handheld specs discussion forms part of this week’s exciting episode of DF Direct Weekly.Watch on YouTube

  • 0:00:00 Introduction
  • 0:00:48 News 1: MindsEye suffers troubled launch
  • 0:20:27 News 2: Switch 2 sells 3.5 million units in first four days
  • 0:28:45 News 3: Next-gen PlayStation handheld specs rumoured
  • 0:41:29 News 4: Stellar Blade PC delivers good performance
  • 0:51:39 News 5: RetroArch Afterplay enables web browser emulation
  • 0:58:27 News 6: Mortal Kombat 2 ported to 3DO
  • 1:05:20 Supporter Q1: Will next-gen Xbox be third party like the Xbox Ally?
  • 1:12:13 Supporter Q2: What Switch games would you like to see patched for Switch 2?
  • 1:17:43 Supporter Q3: How widespread is DLSS on Switch 2?
  • 1:29:25 Supporter Q4: What happens to game rendering when you change the output resolution on your console?
  • 1:33:07 Supporter Q5: Could Microsoft have bluffed their way to success with Xbox One?

Unfortunately, Sony hasn’t chosen to use a 256-bit memory interface – the mystery processor described by Kepler uses the same 128-bit interface as current AMD handhelds – but 16GB of memory is mooted for the handheld. That’s the same as Steam Deck, but more pertinently, the same as PlayStation 5. Beyond that, it’s suggested that the processor is fabricated on TSMC’s 3nm process. That’s very expensive for now, but likely to be more affordable for a console manufacturer a few years down the road.

If this sounds like an amped version of the Z2 Extreme found within the ROG Xbox Ally X, Kepler begs to differ, suggesting that the new graphics architecture within the handheld has “way way way higher perf/CU”. The 3nm process should also offer density and efficiency advantages over Z2 Extreme. Combined with further leaks that development PlayStation 5 hardware is receiving a mode with reduced bandwidth, the implication is that game makers will be able to unify their PS5 game development to support the new handheld and to start work on this sooner rather than later, using existing console dev kits.

There is another benefit for this handheld over all others – the UDNA architecture, said to a be a unification of AMD CDNA and RDNA graphics (though Kepler refers to it as just CDNA 5) should, in theory, be the only handheld using Radeon graphics to support AI upscaling, such as FSR4 or Sony’s homegrown alternative, PSSR. Assuming a 1080p screen, this could be a highly useful feature to have, especially bearing in mind some of the results we’ve seen from DLSS on Nintendo Switch 2.


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Right now, it’s extremely difficult to come up with any kind of projected performance level for the handheld, but the mooted “reduced bandwidth” mode for PS5 dev kits would seem to suggest that Sony intends for the handheld to run current generation software, almost certainly at lower resolutions and/or lower frame-rates. This sounds somewhat like Sony’s own take on the Series S, the difference being that we’d expect to see the handheld arrive in close proximity to Sony’s actual next generation console – the PlayStation 6. You’d imagine that the platform holder would also be looking at the handheld to run variants of PS6 software too. This may sound optimistic but PS6 will be using the same architecture, leaning heavily into machine learning features, which the handheld should support.

Where this leaves the competitive landscape remains unclear. Kepler believes that the upcoming Z2 Extreme found within the ROG Xbox Ally X will be AMD’s last major handheld processor for some time, with nothing using UDNA on the current roadmap. Meanwhile, reports continue to suggest that Microsoft has left the conversation – it will rely on third party companies to create devices instead, like the Ally X. However, Valve continues to bide its time until an actual generational leap in mobile hardware is available for a potential Steam Deck 2 – and there’s no reason it couldn’t tap into the same AMD technologies as Sony. Perhaps the UDNA architecture is the way forward?

Meanwhile, based on the remarkable efficiency seen on the Switch 2, I wouldn’t count out Nvidia in delivering a highly potent PC handheld – assuming x86 to ARM CPU performance is on point. Intel, too, shows promise based on the performance of the Lunar Lake-based chip in the MSI Claw 8 AI+. I’m looking forward to seeing the competitive landscape shift – and the sooner we learn more about UDNA, the better. After all, it’s likely to form the basis of the next generation console hardware created by both Microsoft and Sony – and therefore the same technology that Xbox reckons will deliver “the biggest technological leap ever in a generation”.



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June 17, 2025 0 comments
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A Resonance: Plague Tale Legacy accidentally leaks online
Game Reviews

A Resonance: Plague Tale Legacy accidentally leaks online

by admin June 8, 2025


A new A Plague Tale game is on the way: Resonance.

A teaser popped up prematurely on Focus Entertainment’s Threads account before it was quickly deleted… if not quite quickly enough for someone to grab a copy of it first and post it to reddit, of course.

Resonance A Plague Tale Legacy Reveal Teaser.Watch on YouTube

As for what it shows? Well, not much. At just 15 seconds long, you can blink and see it, but it’s officially called Resonance: A Plague Tale Legacy. It appears to show what may well be a prequel based on Sophia.

It’s slated to arrive in 2026 on PC, PS5, and Xbox Series. It’s possible it’ll pop up again in this evening’s Xbox Games Showcase. Just try and feign surprise.

Need to catch up? Here’s everything that was announced at Summer Game Fest 2025, and here’s everything that happened at Sony’s June 2025 record-breaking State of Play.



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June 8, 2025 0 comments
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Jurassic World Evolution 3 Trailer Leaks, Launching In October
Game Reviews

Jurassic World Evolution 3 Trailer Leaks, Launching In October

by admin June 8, 2025



Screenshot: Frontier Developments / Universal

Jurassic World Evolution 3 is real and launching later this year, according to a newly leaked trailer which also reveals that baby dinosaurs and more fan-requested features are arriving in the anticipated prehistoric theme park simulator sequel.

GameStop Doubles Down On Crypto With Massive Bitcoin Purchase As Stores Close

Update – 6:05 PM EST: Universal and Frontier have just announced the sequel officially.

On June 6, Jurassic Addict on Twitter spotted and shared images and details from what appears to be a story that accidentally went live on German gaming site GameStar. The story leaked that Jurassic World Evolution 3 will be launching on October 21, 2025, on PS5, Xbox Series X/S, and PC. Oddly, no Switch 2 port. The upcoming game is likely to be officially revealed during Summer Game Fest.

Also included in the leaked story was a trailer which has since been pulled from GameStar’s site but has already been uploaded to many places online by fans. Here’s a YouTube version that might be ripped down by the time you read this:

And no, your internet connection isn’t crappy. The quality of the leaked trailer is really bad. Still, this trailer provides us with our first look at baby dinos, a highly requested feature that wasn’t in the first two Jurassic World Evolution games.

Jurassic World fans are already digging through the low-quality trailer to spot new features and additions. As mentioned already, baby dinos are now a part of the game. But fans have also spotted improved and advanced terrain tools, new vehicles to drive around in, more customization options, new behaviors, the ability for flying dinosaurs to walk around on the ground, and new ways to tweak your genetically altered dinosaurs before they hatch.

As a big fan of Frontier Development’s Jurassic World Evolution 2 (and its predecessor), I’m excited that we’re getting a new game later this year, and just a few months after Jurassic World Rebirth hits theaters in July. Hopefully, you’ll be able to create a wild-looking D-Rex in the game.

.



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June 8, 2025 0 comments
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Google Pixel 9
Gaming Gear

Fresh Google Pixel 10 leaks may have revealed some of the colors and wallpapers for the upcoming flagship phone

by admin May 26, 2025



  • More Google Pixel 10 leaks emerge
  • Colors and wallpapers have appeared online
  • The phones should launch in August

We’ve already seen the Google Pixel 10 being filmed for an advert on the streets of Canada, but the leaks aren’t stopping: we now have unofficial information about some of the color options and wallpapers the flagship phone will bring with it.

According to tipster Mystic Leaks (via 9to5Google), the standard Pixel 10 will be available in Obsidian (black), Blue, Iris (purple), and Limoncello (yellow-ish) shades. Limoncello could be similar to the Lemongrass option we saw with the Google Pixel 7 in 2022.

As for the Pixel 10 Pro and the Pixel 10 Pro XL, the colors listed here are Obsidian (black), Green, Sterling (Gray), and Porcelain (white-ish). We’ve only got the names though, and there are no images showing what these colors actually look like.


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The Pixel 9 offers Obsidian (black), Peony (pink), Wintergreen (green-ish), and Porcelain (white-ish). The Pro and Pro XL models come in Obsidian (black), Porcelain (white-ish), Rose Quartz (pink), and Hazel (gray).

Pixel 10 wallpapers

The Google Pixel 9 Pro XL (Image credit: Peter Hoffmann)

From the same source, we’ve got a host of high-resolution Pixel 10 wallpapers, and the team at Android Authority has collected them all together in a bundle, so you can install them on your current phone if you’d like to.

There are a lot of swirls and shapes and gradients here, and everything is very abstract. The colors of the backdrops also match the leaked colors of the phones, and each image has both a dark and a light option to match Android’s visual modes.

We haven’t heard too much about the Google Pixel 10 so far, apart from what was spotted at the recent promotional shoot, but it is expected to show up sometime in August – perhaps with a display upgrade and a significant speed boost.

Sign up for breaking news, reviews, opinion, top tech deals, and more.

Before then, Android 16 should begin to make its way out to the masses. The software is bringing with it numerous improvements, and is going to introduce a significant visual overhaul known as Material 3 Expressive.

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May 26, 2025 0 comments
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