Steam | Battlefield 1
On June 11, 2020, EA finally made peace with Valve. Battlefield 1 arrived on Steam as part of the "EA Play on Steam" integration. Suddenly, millions of new players could access the muddy battlefields of France and the Arabian desert without a secondary launcher. The result? A massive population injection that brought the game back from “niche classic” to “daily active shooter.” In an era of sliding, wall-running, and sci-fi gadgets, Battlefield 1 represents a return to brutal, grounded chaos. Here is why the Steam version is worth your hard drive space today:
+ Unmatched atmosphere + Active Steam player base + Revolutionary Operations mode - Required EA App is annoying - Non-existent solo campaign length (6 hours) battlefield 1 steam
Battlefield 1 hits the "goldilocks zone"—harder than CoD, easier than HLL. Issue: "The EA app failed to launch." Fix: Run Steam as Administrator. Also, go to EA App settings and turn off "In-Game Overlay" (it conflicts with Steam Overlay). On June 11, 2020, EA finally made peace with Valve
While Battlefield V tried (and failed) with attrition systems, and 2042 fumbled the core class identity, Battlefield 1 stands tall as the last truly great DICE game. The Steam version solves the "friend list" problem, provides seamless controller support, and—most importantly—bundles the game with the Revolution Edition for pennies on the dollar during sales. The result
Not everyone has an RTX 5090. Battlefield 1 scales beautifully. It runs on Steam Deck (verified), budget laptops with integrated graphics, and high-end desktops alike. Cross-play isn't available (PC vs. Console), but the Steam player pool is large enough to find full 64-player servers at any hour. How to Get Battlefield 1 on Steam (and the "Launcher Trap") One confusing aspect for new buyers is the launcher situation.