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Battlefield 6 Season 3 launches on May 12 with a mix of long-requested content and another round of systems tuning. The headline addition is Railway to Golmud, a reworked take on Battlefield 4’s Golmud Railway that EA says is the largest map in Battlefield 6 so far, at four times the size of Mirak Valley.
EA is framing the map a throwback to the good old times. Railway to Golmud has been rebuilt for Battlefield 6’s current sandbox, with changes aimed at flow and balance while preserving its combined-arms identity. The moving railway remains central to the design, creating a shifting frontline as infantry, vehicles and aircraft fight across a much larger playspace.
Season 3 also pushes further into core combat tuning. EA says more work is coming to responsiveness, readability, hit registration and netcode, with some changes arriving during the season and others continuing through Battlefield Labs. The company’s pitch is careful: this is another step in an ongoing tuning pass, not a final fix.
Mortars are getting one of the clearest balance changes. After raising crate resupply time from 10 seconds to 30 seconds in Season 2, EA says Season 3 will prevent mortars from regenerating ammo while an active instance is deployed and reduce their accuracy at longer ranges. The goal is to push the gadget toward coordinated squad play and away from static long-range spam.
Outside standard multiplayer, Season 3 expands Battlefield 6’s battle royale offering. Ranked Battle Royale will launch as a Battlefield Labs in Live experience, starting with Quads, while Solos is due back later in the season rather than on day one. EA says more details on both are still to come.
The wider 2026 roadmap gives the update extra weight. EA has already outlined Season 4 around naval warfare, the Tsuru Reef and Wake Island maps, and community features including a server browser with persistent servers, multiplayer leaderboards, Platoons and proximity chat.
How much that shifts the varied long-term sentiment will depend on how the update lands once players get their hands on it. On paper, though, May 12 shapes up as one of Battlefield 6’s more important seasonal releases so far: a genuinely large-scale map, a firmer balance pass on passive explosive play, new competitive battle royale support and another round of core combat tuning in the same update
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