Compare Battlefield 1: Revolution prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by EA Digital Illusions/EA DICE. Published by Electronic Arts Inc.. Released on 10/20/2016. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action, Single Player, Multiplayer, First Person, FPS / TPS.

The complete WWI Battlefield package: base game plus all four expansions, hundreds of maps, and 64-player chaos powered by Frostbite destruction.

Battlefield 1: Revolution is DICE's WWI-era first-person shooter bundled with its entire post-launch content run. The base game, four expansion packs (They Shall Not Pass, In the Name of the Tsar, Turning Tides, and Apocalypse), the Harlem Hellfighter, Red Baron, and Lawrence of Arabia cosmetic packs, plus five Battlepacks all arrive in a single purchase. That means no paywall splitting the server population, no separate premium pass to chase down, and no gaps in the map roster. For anyone coming to BF1 for the first time, this is the only edition worth considering. The multiplayer is where this game earns its reputation. Matches scale to 64 players across large, Frostbite-destructible maps, with a dynamic weather system that can drop visibility mid-assault and actively shift combat outcomes. Four infantry classes anchor the team structure - Assault, Medic, Support, and Scout - and each plays a distinct role in sustaining a push or holding a flank. The Conquest mode handles the classic flag-loop formula cleanly, but Operations is the standout: a narrative-driven, multi-map campaign format where attackers push through a historical WWI offensive and defenders hold the line, with a Behemoth (armored train, airship, or dreadnought) entering to aid the losing side and prevent runaway scorelines. That balance mechanic alone makes Operations more strategically interesting than a standard large-mode loop. War Pigeon and other smaller modes add variety without padding. One legitimate annoyance: class loadout customization is locked behind the matchmaking lobby, which discourages deliberate kit-building before you drop in. The single-player War Stories campaign is short - expect six to eight hours - but punches harder emotionally than most FPS campaigns. Each chapter follows a different protagonist across a different theatre of the war, with varied vehicle and infantry gameplay stitched together by genuinely affecting writing. It is not a replacement for a full-length campaign, and solo-only players will feel the runtime. The campaign AI has been criticized as inconsistent, and some level designs lean toward scripted corridors over open-ended combat spaces. Know this going in. On the content depth side, the Revolution bundle adds roughly 20 extra maps via DLC, including the night maps Nivelle Nights and Prise de Tahure from They Shall Not Pass, and the six-map Russian front set from In the Name of the Tsar, which also introduced 11 weapons, the Ilya-Muromets Heavy Bomber, and the Supply Drop game mode. Turning Tides covers amphibious warfare, and Apocalypse recreates some of the war's most punishing battles. Across all of it, the Frostbite engine holds up visually even years after release, and the sound design - artillery, gas alarms, horse charges - remains a benchmark for the genre. For FPS players who care about team-based structure over individual kill-chasing, BF1 Revolution is a dense, well-rounded package. The Operations mode alone justifies serious multiplayer time. Just do not expect the campaign to anchor your playtime, and be aware that server populations, while still active, have thinned compared to peak years. Pick your server browser carefully and you will find matches. Diego, Scout Team

Battlefield 1: Revolution
ActionSingle PlayerMultiplayerFirst PersonFPS / TPS

Battlefield 1: Revolution

Oct 20, 2016EA Digital Illusions/EA DICEElectronic Arts Inc.
GamerScout Says

The complete WWI Battlefield package: base game plus all four expansions, hundreds of maps, and 64-player chaos powered by Frostbite destruction.

PCXbox
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €1.75

GamerScout Verdict

Best for team-oriented FPS players who want the full WWI Battlefield experience without hunting down DLC separately.

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Price History

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Screenshots & Media

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About Battlefield 1: Revolution

Battlefield 1: Revolution is DICE's WWI-era first-person shooter bundled with its entire post-launch content run. The base game, four expansion packs (They Shall Not Pass, In the Name of the Tsar, Turning Tides, and Apocalypse), the Harlem Hellfighter, Red Baron, and Lawrence of Arabia cosmetic packs, plus five Battlepacks all arrive in a single purchase. That means no paywall splitting the server population, no separate premium pass to chase down, and no gaps in the map roster. For anyone coming to BF1 for the first time, this is the only edition worth considering. The multiplayer is where this game earns its reputation. Matches scale to 64 players across large, Frostbite-destructible maps, with a dynamic weather system that can drop visibility mid-assault and actively shift combat outcomes. Four infantry classes anchor the team structure - Assault, Medic, Support, and Scout - and each plays a distinct role in sustaining a push or holding a flank. The Conquest mode handles the classic flag-loop formula cleanly, but Operations is the standout: a narrative-driven, multi-map campaign format where attackers push through a historical WWI offensive and defenders hold the line, with a Behemoth (armored train, airship, or dreadnought) entering to aid the losing side and prevent runaway scorelines. That balance mechanic alone makes Operations more strategically interesting than a standard large-mode loop. War Pigeon and other smaller modes add variety without padding. One legitimate annoyance: class loadout customization is locked behind the matchmaking lobby, which discourages deliberate kit-building before you drop in. The single-player War Stories campaign is short - expect six to eight hours - but punches harder emotionally than most FPS campaigns. Each chapter follows a different protagonist across a different theatre of the war, with varied vehicle and infantry gameplay stitched together by genuinely affecting writing. It is not a replacement for a full-length campaign, and solo-only players will feel the runtime. The campaign AI has been criticized as inconsistent, and some level designs lean toward scripted corridors over open-ended combat spaces. Know this going in. On the content depth side, the Revolution bundle adds roughly 20 extra maps via DLC, including the night maps Nivelle Nights and Prise de Tahure from They Shall Not Pass, and the six-map Russian front set from In the Name of the Tsar, which also introduced 11 weapons, the Ilya-Muromets Heavy Bomber, and the Supply Drop game mode. Turning Tides covers amphibious warfare, and Apocalypse recreates some of the war's most punishing battles. Across all of it, the Frostbite engine holds up visually even years after release, and the sound design - artillery, gas alarms, horse charges - remains a benchmark for the genre. For FPS players who care about team-based structure over individual kill-chasing, BF1 Revolution is a dense, well-rounded package. The Operations mode alone justifies serious multiplayer time. Just do not expect the campaign to anchor your playtime, and be aware that server populations, while still active, have thinned compared to peak years. Pick your server browser carefully and you will find matches.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Tags

steamOperations Mode64-Player BattlesFrostbite DestructionWWI SettingClass-Based CombatDynamic WeatherBehemoth VehiclesWar Stories CampaignServer Browser

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
8 GB RAM
Storage
50 GB
Graphics
2 GB VRAM - AMD Radeon HD 7850 / NVIDIA GeForce GTX 660
Processor
AMD FX-6350 / Intel Core i5 6600K
System requirements
64-bit Windows 7, Windows 8.1 Windows 10

Recommended

Memory
16 GB RAM
Storage
50 GB
Graphics
AMD Radeon RX 480 4GB / NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060 3GB
Processor
Intel Core i7 4790
System requirements
64-bit Windows 10

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Game Info

Developer
EA Digital Illusions/EA DICE
Publisher
Electronic Arts Inc.
Release Date
Oct 20, 2016

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Frequently asked questions about Battlefield 1: Revolution

How much does Battlefield 1: Revolution cost?

Battlefield 1: Revolution pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

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Compare Battlefield 1: Revolution prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Battlefield 1: Revolution available on?

Battlefield 1: Revolution is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Battlefield 1: Revolution released?

Battlefield 1: Revolution was released on 20 October 2016.

Who developed Battlefield 1: Revolution?

Battlefield 1: Revolution was developed by EA Digital Illusions/EA DICE and published by Electronic Arts Inc..