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Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 Goes Free on the Same Day EA Launches Battlefield REDSEC

Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 Goes Free on the Same Day EA Launches Battlefield REDSEC

Call of Duty
28 Oct
Andre Guaraldo

Activision has just announced another free trial period for Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 Multiplayer and Zombies, launching at the exact same time as EA’s brand-new Battlefield battle royale mode, REDSEC.​

The trial, live from October 28 through November 3, opens up nearly the entire multiplayer and Zombies package for anyone to jump in... right as the FPS community’s attention pivots towards REDSEC’s debut. Activision has already done something similar before, timing major free trial launches to coincide with Battlefield’s own milestones. It’s impossible not to sense a bit of tactical rivalry beneath the surface.​

Battlefield Takes the Upper Hand

For the first time in years, Battlefield looks to have wrestled away significant consumer preference from Call of Duty. Battlefield 6 has smashed launch records with millions of units sold and a massive surge in concurrent Steam players (peaking at over 740,000), even eclipsing COD’s previous highs on the platform. The REDSEC battle royale, free-to-play and aggressively marketed, has brought renewed excitement to the franchise and offered a military-focused alternative to Call of Duty’s more arcade styling.​

Meanwhile, Black Ops 6’s player count has shown a worrying downward trajectory since its initial surge. Enthusiasts who once flocked to every COD release are now split, with some openly favoring the authenticity and fresh design choices present in Battlefield’s new direction.​

Activision’s Response

Activision answers every Battlefield innovation with a new free trial, as if determined to keep its vast playerbase inside the COD ecosystem at any cost. This latest trial, launching alongside REDSEC, is more generous than previous ones: it hands players access to full multiplayer and Zombies content (barring ranked competitive play), trying to acts as a shield against possible player migration during Battlefield’s biggest week of 2025.​

Market data suggests this is more than regular franchise competition, it’s an aggressive defensive maneuver aimed at curbing a clear exodus. While Call of Duty remains a juggernaut on consoles and boasts huge numbers overall, cracks are certainly showing around the foundation as the FPS market evolves.​

The Core of the Rivalry

Battlefield REDSEC arrives at a time when many COD veterans wish for more realism and less “over-the-top” content, seeking alternatives to endless skin crossovers and aggressive microtransactions. EA listened and delivered a game more in line with classic shooter roots, embracing destruction, vehicular combat, and a hardcore battle royale format that stands apart from Warzone.​

COD’s fast-tracked promotions can trap players for now, but it won’t close the widening gap in consumer sentiment. As the rivalry intensifies, Activision’s frequent free trials are starting to look less like marketing and more like a warning: loyalty to a franchise must be constantly earned, not just inherited.​


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Feature image credit: Call of Duty

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