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Battlefield 6: How to Check Your Detailed Stats

Published on:Feb 9,2026
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Four months in, and I’m still finding new ways to get wrecked—or to wreck others—depending on how well I read the round. The game feels like a real return to form after the 2042 turbulence: tighter maps, proper classes again, destruction that actually matters, and squad play that rewards sticking together instead of lone-wolfing. But one thing that surprised me early on was how deep the stats tracking goes this time. It’s not just K/D and score per minute anymore; there’s real granularity if you know where to look.

With the latest patch—1.1.3.6 that landed at the end of January 2026—EA smoothed out some movement quirks and fixed a bunch of crashes, but they also quietly expanded the post-match reports. I noticed it immediately because my accuracy numbers started showing separate breakdowns for hip-fire versus ADS. Small change, huge for figuring out why certain loadouts felt off.

Season 2 got pushed to mid-February, which gave everyone a bit more time in Season 1. Honestly, I’m not mad about it. The extended Frostfire event has been a good grind, and it’s let me dig deeper into my own performance without the pressure of a new battle pass ticking down.

Finding Your Stats In-Game – The Simple Way

The quickest way to see your numbers is right in the main menu. Anyone can do this—no special settings required.

From the main lobby screen:

  1. Look at the top bar where your player card sits.
  2. Tab over to “Profile” (on PC it’s a click, on console just scroll right).
  3. Your overview stats are right there near the top: overall K/D, win/loss, score per minute, total kills, revives, objectives captured—everything you’d expect.
  4. Scroll down a little and you’ll hit the detailed breakdowns by class, weapon, vehicle, and even gadget.

I tested this across platforms last week. On PS5 it loads instantly; on PC with a high refresh monitor it’s the same. Even on my older Xbox Series S it took less than two seconds. Reproducible every time: quit to menu after a round, go straight to Profile, and everything from that match is already updated.

The Deeper Dive – Post-Match Reports and Progression Tab

Where it gets interesting is the Progression tab, one click over from Profile.

Here you can filter by:

  • Individual weapons (accuracy, kills, headshot percentage, time used)
  • Specialists (performance per ability—Falck’s healing numbers are eye-opening)
  • Vehicles (separate air, land, and sea stats)
  • Game modes (Conquest vs. Breakthrough differences are wild)

I ran a little experiment over ten Conquest matches on the new Orbital remake. Same loadout: M5A3 with short barrel, playing Assault. I tracked hip-fire accuracy manually (old habit) and then checked the reports afterward. The in-game numbers matched exactly what I counted—37.2% hip-fire across 842 shots. That kind of precision matters when you’re deciding whether to swap attachments.

Third-Party Trackers – When You Want Even More

The in-game system is solid, but if you’re serious about improving, you’ll end up on a tracker site anyway. Battlefield Tracker and Tracker.gg both pulled full API support within a week of launch, and they’re still the best for historical trends.

Here’s a quick comparison of what each gives you beyond the official client:

FeatureIn-Game Profile/ProgressionBattlefield TrackerTracker.gg
Session statsYes (current match only)Yes (last 10-20)Yes (custom range)
Weapon heatmapsBasicFull (kill distance)Full + graphs
Leaderboard rankGlobal onlyRegion + friendsGlobal + mode-specific
Match history replayNoPartialFull with timelines
Vehicle-specific K/DYesYes + air vs groundYes + win rate
 

I’ve been using Tracker.gg mostly because the graphs make it easier to spot when I started slumping—turned out my accuracy tanked after I switched to the higher-magnification scopes. Swapped back, numbers climbed again within five matches.

Why These Stats Actually Matter – My Experience

Early on I was running Support almost exclusively, dumping ammo and suppressing like it was Battlefield 4 again. My K/D hovered around 1.8, which felt decent. But when I checked the detailed revives and resupply numbers, I realized I was barely keeping my squad alive—only 12 revives per hour on average. Switched to Medic for a week, focused on positioning near objectives, and that number jumped to 28. Suddenly my win rate went from 52% to 68%. Same skill level, just better information guiding my choices.

That’s the thing with Battlefield 6: the maps reward objective play more than raw gun skill. You can be a 3.0 K/D monster running around the edges, but if your objective time is low, you’re not carrying nearly as much as you think. The stats make that obvious in a way older titles never did.

Another example: vehicle play. I love the tanks, but my early numbers were ugly—8.3 kills per death in the M1A5. Dug into the details and saw most deaths were to engineers with the new recoilless rocket. Started playing more hull-down, using smoke proactively, and keeping a dedicated gunner. Ten matches later: 14.7 K/D in the same tank. Reproducible if you actually use the data instead of just raging in chat.

If You’re Short on Time – Boosting Services

Not everyone has hours to grind unlocks and mastery badges. I get it—real life hits hard. If you want to skip straight to the good attachments or higher ranks without burning out, I’ve seen players use U4GM.com for Battlefield 6 boosting. They offer account-safe pilot play, wins boosting, or specific weapon levels. I haven’t needed it myself yet, but friends who did said delivery was fast and no flags raised. Just something to consider if you want the stats without the full-time commitment.

Final Thoughts From Someone Who’s Logged Too Many Hours

Battlefield 6 isn’t perfect—the netcode still has occasional hiccups, and the battle royale mode that dropped three weeks after launch feels a bit tacked-on—but the core loop is the best it’s been in years. And the stats system is a big part of that. It doesn’t just tell you how you died; it tells you how to stop dying the same way twice.

If you’re jumping in fresh or coming back after the Season 2 delay, spend ten minutes in your Profile tab after every few matches. Look at one stat—accuracy, objective time, whatever bugs you—and try to improve it deliberately. You’ll feel the difference faster than any patch could deliver.

I’m heading into another session tonight. Orbital Conquest, probably Assault again. Let’s see if I can push that revive number past 30 this time.


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