Battlefield 6 turns your profile into a full display of your progress, playstyle, and everything you’ve earned.
DICE designed the profile system to give players a way to express themselves, whether that’s through collectible rewards, rank milestones, or class progression.
With the Playercard, Profile Soldier, and all the accessibility tools, the game gives you room to make it truly your own.
What Can You Customize in Your Playercard?
Your Playercard is the centerpiece of your identity in Battlefield 6. It’s what other players see in lobbies, kill cams, and post-match screens.
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To access it, open the Profile tab and select Edit Playercard in the bottom-left corner. Inside, you’ll find separate sections for customizing your Background, Icon, Title, Badges, Stickers, and Dog Tag.
Each one shows off a different part of what you’ve achieved. The menu also has an option to display unowned cosmetics so you can preview items you haven’t unlocked yet.
Badges are earned by mastering specific weapons, vehicles, or classes, while Dog Tags come from completing Accolades and collecting hidden campaign items.
The campaign’s dog tag collectibles unlock special rewards such as playercard icons, XP boosts, and rare skins.
Completing them all rewards a final tag that proves you’ve explored every corner of the story.
Most titles and icons are earned by ranking up or completing challenges, providing veterans with something to display proudly on their profile.
Once you’ve earned a new badge or icon, you can equip it instantly from the same Playercard menu.
This makes it easy to switch between displays for different matches or when new events are added.
After claiming, Twitch Drops and promotional rewards are reflected here, though a restart may be required for proper synchronization.
How Does the Profile Soldier System Work?
Your Profile Soldier represents the character model shown on your profile screen, based on the class and faction you set as your default.
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Unlike Battlefield 5’s flexible system, Battlefield 6 defines each specialist’s appearance, gender, and voice based on their faction.
In Battlefield 6’s story, the conflict splits the world into NATO and Pax Armata, with each faction made up of three units like NATO’s Coyote Squad, United Albion, and Desert Locusts, and Pax Armata’s Fireteam Vedmak, Espada, and Kahina Unité.
Each squad contains unique characters who correspond to the game’s four classes. This keeps the story more consistent, but comes at the cost of customization freedom.
You can still unlock alternate outfits and color variants for each character, but you can’t mix gear across factions or alter facial models or genders manually.
This design choice is a double-edged sword. It strengthens the worldbuilding and gives each faction its own identity.
On the other hand, it feels less flexible than the customization system that Battlefield 5 was praised for. DICE wants the story and characters to have a bigger role in how players present themselves.
What Accessibility and Interface Options Can You Change?
Some customization options are purely for comfort or visibility, but they still influence how the game feels to play.

Battlefield 6 has a detailed accessibility menu that lets players adjust their HUD, audio, controls, and visual settings.
Players can adjust every part of the HUD, including icon scaling, mini-map size, and screen transparency.
Crosshair customization is equally deep, letting you change thickness, color, opacity, and even hit indicator feedback (normal, headshot, armor, or kill).
There’s a live preview to show what your setup will look like across different environments. Color profiles cater to various vision types, including presets for Deuteranopia, Tritanopia, and Protanopia, as well as a full RGB picker for those who prefer to create their own palette.
You can even decide how strong camera shake or sprint bobbing should be, remove chromatic aberration, or disable weapon and world motion blur entirely.
These tweaks are lifesavers for competitive players who prefer clarity over cinematic flair. Audio is fully customizable with separate sliders for effects, voices, music, and in-world radios.
The Tinnitus SFX slider lets players adjust or remove the high-pitched ringing from explosions for a smoother experience.
The chat system also includes robust text-to-speech and speech-to-text support, plus options to resize or reposition the chat box entirely.
How Do Controls and Gameplay Customization Work?
For control setups, Battlefield 6 carries forward DICE’s full remapping system across both keyboard/mouse and controller.

You can customize infantry, vehicle, and UI controls separately, switch between hold or toggle inputs, invert camera movement per vehicle, and adjust aim sensitivity for each zoom level.
Competitive players can enable Uniform Infantry Aiming to keep aiming consistent and adjust the Zoom Sensitivity Coefficient for their screen.
Most players keep the coefficient at approximately 0 for mouse and keyboard, or 178 when using a controller, although it can be adjusted to suit personal preference.
There’s also Uniform Vehicle Aiming, which provides tanks and aircraft with equally precise control.
From graphics to audio and handling, Battlefield 6 lets players adjust nearly every aspect of the game’s feel.
The level of customization here is unmatched for a modern shooter, but it can be a lot to take in initially.
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