Battlefield finally knocked Call of Duty off the throne, and the rest of the 2025 US game charts read like a plot twist nobody fully believed.
Battlefield pulls the upset
Battlefield pulls the upset
- Yeah, this actually happened. Battlefield 6 ended 2025 as the top-selling game in the US.
- All the effort from EA and Battlefield Studios paid off in a way most people doubted.
- The big shock is that Call of Duty did not just get challenged, it got passed.
- Most expectations capped Battlefield 6 at strong competition, not outright domination.
- The lone early caller was Mike Ybarra, who flagged this outcome back in August 2025.
- For everyone else, this result landed sideways.
- NBA 2K26 landed in second place, just behind Battlefield 6.
- Borderlands 4 grabbed third, even with launch performance headaches.
- Monster Hunter Wilds held fourth after a strong debut, despite PC struggles.
- Call of Duty Black Ops 7 only reached fifth for the full year, even after winning December.
- The Elder Scrolls IV Oblivion Remastered made the top ten without being a shooter or annual sports title.
- Monster Hunter Wilds was the only other non-shooter in that top group.
- Ghost of Yotei slipped to eleventh, which still signals a solid reception for Sucker Punch.
- Grand Theft Auto V showed up again, sneaking into the number 20 spot like it always does.
- All of this came from Mat Piscatella.
- He published the final US sales report for software and hardware.
- The data paints a clear picture of where momentum landed.
- US video game spending rose 1.4 percent compared to 2024.
- Total market value hit $60.7 billion in 2025.
- That growth did not come from blockbuster game sales.
- Mobile games pulled a lot of weight.
- Hardware sales helped, especially the Nintendo Switch 2.
- Subscription services added another layer of revenue.
- Piscatella pointed out that spending rose without more people buying games.
- The real driver was higher prices across games and subscriptions.
- Basically, players paid more, not more players paid.
- The Nintendo Switch 2 topped US console sales for 2025.
- About 4.4 million units moved during the year.
- PlayStation 5 followed in second place.
- Battlefield 6, winning the year, rewrote expectations.
- Market growth came from hardware, mobile, and subscriptions, not software dominance.
- 2025 proved that price pressure and platform shifts matter as much as hit games.