Global Community Manager Kevin Johnson recently responded to netizens' comparison videos, indicating that this game adopts a more restrained auxiliary targeting design.
Hecksmith, who claims to be a test expert on "Call of Duty", has released a comparison video of assistive aiming for two games: when the player holds the left stick to enable assistive aiming in "Call of Duty", the system can almost automatically complete accurate shooting; while the assistive help of "Battlefield 6" only provides target traction, and players still need to correct operation errors by themselves.Foreign media commented when forwarding the video: "This fully proves that COD's auxiliary aim will do most of the work for you."
Johnson responded: "This basically reflects the Battlefield series' consistent position on auxiliary targeting - it is just a fair compensation tool, not a existence beyond the player's own technology. The real strength always comes from the operator itself."
The first weekend of the BETA public beta in "Battlefield 6" has ended, and the second weekend will start at 4 pm on August 14 and end at 4 pm on August 18.