
I haven’t personally run into anything that dramatic, but some of my statistics for medals and things of that nature don’t appear to be updating accurately. I’ve heard reports that some people are having their unlocks and rank reset, which isn’t entirely surprising considering prior Battlefield launches. Each platform will get the final map once its players build up a collective 69 million team actions (spotting, reviving, etc.). I’m glad DICE went this way, and I’m also glad that all four modes - Rush, Conquest, Squad Rush, and Squad Deathmatch - are playable on all four (soon to be five) multiplayer maps. If you had all of the class gear unlocked in BC2, you’ll have the ’60s-era counterparts in Vietnam, too, minus whatever items wouldn’t make sense for the period. Perhaps the decision has to do with all of your multiplayer statistics and progression, which are shared between the core game and this expansion. Because really, all of the parts are there: new maps, weapons, vehicles, voice-overs, and even a 49-song soundtrack are what you’ll find.īut no, this content gets its own little menu directly inside of Bad Company 2, complete with “Fortunate Son” by CCR. It’s surprising to me that Vietnam was released as an expansion rather than a standalone product.
#BATTLEFIELD 6 VIETNAM PC#
Released: December 18 for PC / December 21 for consoles

Battlefield: Bad Company 2 Vietnam is one of those rare products where if it simply works as promised - or gets even marginally close - it’s a crowd pleaser.ĭICE ran into some temporary technical issues with online multiplayer in Battlefield 1943 and Bad Company 2 right around each game’s launch, causing me to be more than a little nervous for the just-released multiplayer-only Vietnam expansion, but that’s thankfully not the case here (for the most part).Īnd, guess what? The crowds seem to be mighty pleased with this one.īattlefield: Bad Company 2 Vietnam (Xbox LIVE, PlayStation Network, PC)
