Battlefield 4 builds on BF3 with a better-executed solo campaign and memorable multiplayer maps like Flood Zone and Siege of Shanghai. Solid successor despite a catastrophic launch.
Your verdict
Category
First-Person Shooter4 players16+
Description
Direct sequel set in the South China Sea amid a war between the United States, Russia and China. Published by Electronic Arts and developed by DICE, released in 2013 across Europe, Asia, Japan, Canada and North America. Levolution mechanic introducing map-altering events mid-match, 24-player multiplayer on ten maps, tablet-driven Commander mode, amphibious and naval vehicles.
Battlefield 4 review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
4/5
Music
★★★★★
"Excellent"
3/5
Story
★★★★★
"Solid"
Battlefields of spectacular realism, real-time destruction and photorealistic light: war takes on a cinematic scale. The density of the settings and the pyrotechnic effects compose a chaos of striking credibility. This visual ambition, polished and grandiose, places the game among the technical showcases.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
The sequel pushes scale and spectacle even further: huge maps, massive destruction and scripted events that upend the battlefield mid-fight. Coordinating your squad to turn a match around delivers intense satisfaction. Snappy, grandiose and technically stunning, a multiplayer FPS built for epic clashes where every second counts.
Addictiveness
"Obsessive"
Switching from infantryman to tank gunner or helicopter pilot across vast maps where everything collapses sets up a chaotic team tactics that keeps demanding the next round. Unlocking weapons and gadgets rewards every match. The campaign stays anecdotal and the balancing divides opinion, but the scale of the battles and the squad play keep a stubborn multiplayer hold.
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Massive"
Betting on the chaos of a shifting battlefield, Battlefield 4 collapses sets and structures amid massive online clashes where every class and vehicle counts. Beyond its campaign, weapon progression and competitive modes sustain hundreds of hours. That multiplayer generosity still keeps its servers busy.
An ambitious sequel with a chaotic launch, pushing the destruction engine to its peak late in the console's life. Printed in volume, it stays very accessible and without value, its appeal resting mostly on a multiplayer whose PS3 servers are closed. Its collector interest is low, that of a big-series military FPS with no scarcity or lasting offline demand.
Better with friends
Large-scale battles give the series all its flavor, where squads, vehicles and destruction turn every map into a living theater of operations. The competition rewards team coordination over solo heroics: covering an ally, retaking a point or flying a chopper spawns improvised stories. Online play hinges on servers whose longevity is no longer assured, but the formula stays heady.
Is Battlefield 4 still worth playing in 2026?
Battlefield 4 had a chaotic launch, but once patched it became one of the series' most cherished pillars, and its servers still run. Maps like Siege of Shanghai, with its collapsing skyscraper, or Flood Zone, reshaped by rising waters, showcase a destruction and dynamism that stay thrilling. The large-scale multiplayer remains its beating heart, still active and enjoyable today. The single-player campaign, more polished than BF3's, stays incidental. For the fan of team-based shooters, the title clearly still rewards the visit.