Battlefield 5's new map is exactly what I want from Battlefield maps

As much as I gripe about it, I'm enjoying Battlefield 5. One thing I especially like is that EA has ditched the season pass model and is releasing new maps for free. Even better, the first big update has dropped what's immediately my favorite BF5 map: Panzerstorm.

I'm annoyed that DICE isn't running any 24/7 Panzerstorm servers (that I can find), as would be customary in many community-run servers when a new map releases. The only way to play it is to find a server that happens to have landed on it, queue up, and hope the match isn't over by the time you join—or just wait for a server to roll around to it. That annoyance aside, Panzerstorm brings me back to the old Battlefield days I was pining for as recently as, oh, yesterday: wide open fields and lots of vehicles.

As opposed to my subject in that article, Devastation, which funnels everyone into a central cathedral, every point on Panzerstorm changed hands over the course of one match, and none felt much more important than the others. Because of that, there were a lot of ways to be helpful: At one point I drove a tank, at another I was top machine gunner on one (they can duck now, thank goodness), later I lugged a machine gun up a church tower (and then someone blew it up), and for a while I found a nice hilltop from which to spot enemies through my scope (known as 'actually being a useful Scout player'). 

I prefer this kind of freeform play over maps that funnel me toward grenade death. I want to look out over the horizon, see three contested points, and then decide (hopefully with my squad) which to go help. Or, play defense and actually be challenged, rather than sit on a point for half the match while the rest of the players fight over a centerpiece.

To me, the less 'designed' a Battlefield map feels, the better it is (though I know the same level of design work goes into a map regardless of how it feels). I like them when they're like Tribes maps: lots of space to get lost in and not very many buildings. 

Spacious maps generate a more convincing fantasy. I like playing Support, but I feel silly (that is, sillier than I already do for playing my war fantasy nonsense) sprinting around city streets with a machine gun, jumping around in buildings and on trains. On Panzerstorm, I can properly get setup behind some sandbags, and play the role more like I think it ought to be, covering big swaths of hillside with suppressing fire. 

There's more character to each life, too. Contesting indestructible landmarks with clear lanes and flanks feels like 'playing an FPS,' whereas Panzerstorm is more warlike and less predictable, with fewer repeated moments and no long sequences where everyone's throwing their bodies down the same chokepoints. I like that a little church can briefly become a hotspot before being blown up, never to be revisited. 

I want more battlefields like Panzerstorm, and not more battletrainstations and battlealleys. (Oh, and 24/7 servers for each map. The lack of community server rentals right now really sucks.)

There's a lot more than Panzerstorm in Battlefield 5's Overture Update—it adds a new singleplayer War Story and a bunch of balance changes, too—and you can read the full update notes here. It's a big one, so expect a somewhat lengthy download. Worth it for the tanks, though.

Tyler Wilde
Executive Editor

Tyler grew up in Silicon Valley during the '80s and '90s, playing games like Zork and Arkanoid on early PCs. He was later captivated by Myst, SimCity, Civilization, Command & Conquer, all the shooters they call "boomer shooters" now, and PS1 classic Bushido Blade (that's right: he had Bleem!). Tyler joined PC Gamer in 2011, and today he's focused on the site's news coverage. His hobbies include amateur boxing and adding to his 1,200-plus hours in Rocket League.