Compare Battlefield 4: Premium (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by DICE. Published by Electronic Arts Inc.. Released on 6/11/2020. Available on Xbox Series X, Xbox One, PC, Xbox. Genres: Action.

Five expansion packs, 20 extra maps, and a heap of exclusive assignments bundled for BF4 diehards who want the full package without hunting individual DLCs.

Battlefield 4 Premium is the all-in-one DLC bundle for one of DICE's most enduring multiplayer shooters. It collects all five expansion packs - China Rising, Second Assault, Naval Strike, Dragon's Valley, and Final Stand - delivering 20 additional maps, 48 exclusive assignments, new game modes, and a pile of cosmetic extras like camos, paints, and emblems. If you are already committed to the base game and want everything in one shot rather than drip-feeding individual packs, this is the logical path. From a pure value-per-content standpoint, Premium justifies itself on map count alone. The base game's rotation is solid but finite, and after enough hours it starts to feel like a loop. The expansion maps genuinely diversify the battlefield - Naval Strike shifts combat to amphibious engagements, Final Stand introduces a sci-fi-adjacent Arctic aesthetic with experimental weapons, and Second Assault revisits fan-favorite maps from BF3 with full Frostbite 3 upgrades. Dragon's Valley, the China-themed set, adds dense infantry corridors that change the pace considerably compared to the vehicle-heavy vanilla experience. Variety across these packs is real, not cosmetic padding. The 48 exclusive assignments are a meaningful addition for players who like structured progression targets. These are not trivial tick-box challenges - several require coordinated team play or mastery of specific weapon classes, which integrates well with BF4's squad-based design. The cosmetic unlocks (paints, emblems, camos) are strictly aesthetic and will matter to you exactly as much as you expect them to. The modes bundled in - Carrier Assault, Air Superiority, Capture the Flag variants - add genuine mechanical variety and are worth dropping into for a change of pace. The caveats are worth naming clearly. Battlefield 4 is, at this point, a mature title running on aging server infrastructure. Player population on certain expansion playlists can be thin depending on the time of day and platform, so some of those 20 maps may load rarely in public matchmaking. Premium's value scales directly with how active the community is on your platform of choice. The Xbox versions listed here have their own player base dynamics, and peak hours matter. Also, the assignments, while engaging, are locked to specific DLC maps, so if a particular playlist goes quiet, progress stalls. For anyone who has put serious hours into BF4's base game and wants to extend that investment, Premium is the practical choice. It is not a reinvention - DICE did not redesign core systems here - but it layers enough content on top of an already deep multiplayer framework to meaningfully extend the game's shelf life. The cosmetic side is a bonus, not a reason to buy. The maps and modes are the actual product. Diego, Scout Team

Battlefield 4: Premium (DLC)
Action

Battlefield 4: Premium (DLC)

Jun 11, 2020DICEElectronic Arts Inc.
GamerScout Says

Five expansion packs, 20 extra maps, and a heap of exclusive assignments bundled for BF4 diehards who want the full package without hunting individual DLCs.

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About Battlefield 4: Premium (DLC)

Battlefield 4 Premium is the all-in-one DLC bundle for one of DICE's most enduring multiplayer shooters. It collects all five expansion packs - China Rising, Second Assault, Naval Strike, Dragon's Valley, and Final Stand - delivering 20 additional maps, 48 exclusive assignments, new game modes, and a pile of cosmetic extras like camos, paints, and emblems. If you are already committed to the base game and want everything in one shot rather than drip-feeding individual packs, this is the logical path. From a pure value-per-content standpoint, Premium justifies itself on map count alone. The base game's rotation is solid but finite, and after enough hours it starts to feel like a loop. The expansion maps genuinely diversify the battlefield - Naval Strike shifts combat to amphibious engagements, Final Stand introduces a sci-fi-adjacent Arctic aesthetic with experimental weapons, and Second Assault revisits fan-favorite maps from BF3 with full Frostbite 3 upgrades. Dragon's Valley, the China-themed set, adds dense infantry corridors that change the pace considerably compared to the vehicle-heavy vanilla experience. Variety across these packs is real, not cosmetic padding. The 48 exclusive assignments are a meaningful addition for players who like structured progression targets. These are not trivial tick-box challenges - several require coordinated team play or mastery of specific weapon classes, which integrates well with BF4's squad-based design. The cosmetic unlocks (paints, emblems, camos) are strictly aesthetic and will matter to you exactly as much as you expect them to. The modes bundled in - Carrier Assault, Air Superiority, Capture the Flag variants - add genuine mechanical variety and are worth dropping into for a change of pace. The caveats are worth naming clearly. Battlefield 4 is, at this point, a mature title running on aging server infrastructure. Player population on certain expansion playlists can be thin depending on the time of day and platform, so some of those 20 maps may load rarely in public matchmaking. Premium's value scales directly with how active the community is on your platform of choice. The Xbox versions listed here have their own player base dynamics, and peak hours matter. Also, the assignments, while engaging, are locked to specific DLC maps, so if a particular playlist goes quiet, progress stalls. For anyone who has put serious hours into BF4's base game and wants to extend that investment, Premium is the practical choice. It is not a reinvention - DICE did not redesign core systems here - but it layers enough content on top of an already deep multiplayer framework to meaningfully extend the game's shelf life. The cosmetic side is a bonus, not a reason to buy. The maps and modes are the actual product. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

xboxTeam MultiplayerMap PacksAssignment SystemAmphibious CombatCosmetic UnlocksMode VarietyExpansion BundlesteamLarge-Scale MultiplayerCombined ArmsClass-Based64-PlayerDestruction PhysicsCommunity ServersVehicle Combat

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
85%(79,682)

Game Info

Developer
DICE
Publisher
Electronic Arts Inc.
Release Date
Jun 11, 2020

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