Compare Battlefield 5 - Starter Pack (Xbox One) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by EA Digital Illusions/EA DICE. Published by Electronic Arts Inc.. Released on 4/4/2019. Available on Xbox Series X, Xbox One, Xbox. Genres: Action, Single Player, Multiplayer, First Person.

A Starter Pack for Battlefield V that hands you 500 Battlefield Currency plus a small cosmetic bundle - the Night Owl weapon skin set for four specific rifles and the Glacial facepaint - before you fire a single shot in one of WWII's most mechanically sharp multiplayer shooters.

Battlefield V is a WWII first-person shooter built around large-scale combined-arms multiplayer, putting squads of Assault, Medic, Support, and Recon players onto sprawling maps that range from the Norwegian fjords to the deserts of North Africa. The core loop rewards class discipline hard: medics revive, support players drop ammo, and everyone can now pick up downed squadmates regardless of class - a small rule change that fundamentally tightens squad cohesion in ways most shooters never bother attempting. Gunplay moved away from the randomised bullet deviation of its predecessor and toward learnable recoil patterns, which means skill compounds over time rather than luck flattening the skill gap. New movement options - crouch sprinting, directional rolling, diving through windows - give the moment-to-moment footwork more texture than the series had seen before. Fortification building adds a light construction layer: drop sandbags, reinforce chokepoints, and reshape the tactical picture of a contested sector. It is not a strategy game, but the decision-making density is real. The single-player War Stories are the weakest argument for the package. The anthology structure is ambitious - each episode drops you into a different theatre and perspective - but most chapters are short, the stealth segments fight the engine, and the AI of both allies and enemies is unconvincing. The Norwegian episode, following a resistance fighter, is the clear standout, but even that wraps before it finds its footing. Treat the campaign as a training ground for the multiplayer mechanics and you will get the correct amount of value from it. The game had a genuinely rough launch window: bugs, balance problems, and a marketing cycle that generated more controversy than enthusiasm. DICE patched aggressively in the months following release, and the post-launch Tides of War updates added maps, weapons, and vehicles at no extra charge - a meaningful structural choice that kept the player population unified rather than fractured across DLC tiers. Years on, the servers remain populated enough that finding a full lobby is not a problem, though peak times vary by region. Now, about this Starter Pack specifically. The 500 Battlefield Currency is a small head start on cosmetics. The Night Owl weapon skin set covers four weapons you will actually use - the Sturmgewehr 1-5, Sten, KE7, and Lee-E - and the Glacial facepaint rounds out a tidy cosmetic bundle. None of this touches the gameplay variables, but if you were already planning to pick up the base game, having the currency and skins in hand from day one removes a minor friction point. This is not a decision-driver on its own; it is a deal-sweetener that makes sense if the underlying game is already on your list. For an Xbox player who wants a mature, team-oriented WWII shooter with genuine mechanical depth and a live multiplayer population, Battlefield V holds up. It rewards players who learn its systems - and there are real systems to learn. Diego, Scout Team

Battlefield 5 - Starter Pack (Xbox One)
ActionSingle PlayerMultiplayerFirst Person

Battlefield 5 - Starter Pack (Xbox One)

Apr 4, 2019EA Digital Illusions/EA DICEElectronic Arts Inc.
GamerScout Says

A Starter Pack for Battlefield V that hands you 500 Battlefield Currency plus a small cosmetic bundle - the Night Owl weapon skin set for four specific rifles and the Glacial facepaint - before you fire a single shot in one of WWII's most mechanically sharp multiplayer shooters.

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About Battlefield 5 - Starter Pack (Xbox One)

Battlefield V is a WWII first-person shooter built around large-scale combined-arms multiplayer, putting squads of Assault, Medic, Support, and Recon players onto sprawling maps that range from the Norwegian fjords to the deserts of North Africa. The core loop rewards class discipline hard: medics revive, support players drop ammo, and everyone can now pick up downed squadmates regardless of class - a small rule change that fundamentally tightens squad cohesion in ways most shooters never bother attempting. Gunplay moved away from the randomised bullet deviation of its predecessor and toward learnable recoil patterns, which means skill compounds over time rather than luck flattening the skill gap. New movement options - crouch sprinting, directional rolling, diving through windows - give the moment-to-moment footwork more texture than the series had seen before. Fortification building adds a light construction layer: drop sandbags, reinforce chokepoints, and reshape the tactical picture of a contested sector. It is not a strategy game, but the decision-making density is real. The single-player War Stories are the weakest argument for the package. The anthology structure is ambitious - each episode drops you into a different theatre and perspective - but most chapters are short, the stealth segments fight the engine, and the AI of both allies and enemies is unconvincing. The Norwegian episode, following a resistance fighter, is the clear standout, but even that wraps before it finds its footing. Treat the campaign as a training ground for the multiplayer mechanics and you will get the correct amount of value from it. The game had a genuinely rough launch window: bugs, balance problems, and a marketing cycle that generated more controversy than enthusiasm. DICE patched aggressively in the months following release, and the post-launch Tides of War updates added maps, weapons, and vehicles at no extra charge - a meaningful structural choice that kept the player population unified rather than fractured across DLC tiers. Years on, the servers remain populated enough that finding a full lobby is not a problem, though peak times vary by region. Now, about this Starter Pack specifically. The 500 Battlefield Currency is a small head start on cosmetics. The Night Owl weapon skin set covers four weapons you will actually use - the Sturmgewehr 1-5, Sten, KE7, and Lee-E - and the Glacial facepaint rounds out a tidy cosmetic bundle. None of this touches the gameplay variables, but if you were already planning to pick up the base game, having the currency and skins in hand from day one removes a minor friction point. This is not a decision-driver on its own; it is a deal-sweetener that makes sense if the underlying game is already on your list. For an Xbox player who wants a mature, team-oriented WWII shooter with genuine mechanical depth and a live multiplayer population, Battlefield V holds up. It rewards players who learn its systems - and there are real systems to learn. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

xboxWW2 SettingSquad-BasedClass SystemLarge-Scale MultiplayerFortification BuildingLearnable RecoilWar StoriesCombined ArmsCosmetic BundleConsole Shooter

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Game Info

Developer
EA Digital Illusions/EA DICE
Publisher
Electronic Arts Inc.
Release Date
Apr 4, 2019

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