Two titans, two launches, one very loud crossfire. Fans of first-person shooters are having a field day with the back-to-back release of the two biggest titles in the genre.
Within weeks of each other, Activision’s latest Call of Duty entry and EA’s newly-released Battlefield chapter landed on shelves — reviving one of gaming’s longest-running rivalries.
One battleground
Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 brings the franchise’s trademark mix of campaign, competitive multiplayer, and its ever-expanding Warzone ecosystem.
It is set in 2035, following the events of Black Ops 2 and Black Ops 6, when a sinister weapon was developed to turn fear into a tool of warfare, manipulating soldiers and civilians alike.
Early reactions note an emphasis on close-quarters maps and faster time-to-kill — a reaffirmation of what longtime players call its “muscle memory design” — featuring legacy characters like Mason and Menendez.
On the other hand, Battlefield 6 relies on sprawling environments, vehicle warfare, unpredictable sandboxes, and matches where the map itself feels like a character.
While Black Ops 7 tapped into psychological terror, the EA game is about an all-out war against a rising private army — a full-on geopolitical drama fought by mostly new faces.
It’s less about hero soldiers and more about fractured conflict zones, the kind of wartime ambiguity the franchise has historically embraced.
A rare double feature for FPS fans
With both games launching nearly side by side, players suddenly have two massive shooters competing for their trigger time. One is a tightly-choreographed firefight; the other is chaos at scale.
It’s a close contest between two very different philosophies. But for now at least, Call of Duty and Battlefield are back in the same arena — and the fight for player loyalty is very much on.
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