If you missed a soldier skin or weapon camo during a previous Battlefield 6 season, there is now a path back to it. The catch is that you will need to pay for it separately rather than earn it through the battle pass grind.
Battlefield Studios confirmed this week that starting in Season 4, select cosmetics from past battle passes will begin appearing in the in-game store as purchasable bundles. The announcement responds directly to community feedback, with the studio saying players wanted more chances to pick up cosmetics they missed while still keeping each new season worth jumping into from day one. For players who have been with Battlefield 2042 since launch, the series' live service approach has always carried a tension between seasonal exclusivity and the frustration of missing out on limited content.
What's coming back and when
Season 4 is the starting point for this change, and it arrives later this month. Battlefield 6 is currently running Season 3 under the High-Value Target update, so the window before this system goes live is short.
The returning items will cover soldier skins, weapon cosmetics, and vehicle looks that were previously tied to seasonal battle passes. Pricing sits between 500 and 2,400 Battlefield Coins, which works out to roughly $5 to $20. Weapon bundles tend to land at the lower end of that range, while full operator packs push toward the top.
The items that stay gone
Here's the thing: the exclusions are meaningful. The items most players associate with prestige, the ones at the top of the Prestige path or locked behind the premium instant unlock tiers, are specifically carved out from this program. So if you were grinding toward a top-tier operator skin and never got there, that one probably is not coming back.
What this means in practice is that the returning items skew toward mid-tier cosmetics rather than the marquee pieces that drove players to complete a full season. It softens the FOMO without eliminating it entirely, which seems to be exactly the balance Battlefield Studios is aiming for.
Battlefield Studios leaves the door open for adjustments
The studio was careful not to lock itself into a rigid structure here. The official statement noted that the team will continue reviewing how previous content is made available and will make adjustments where it makes sense for both the game and the community. That language leaves room for the program to expand, contract, or shift depending on how players respond once Season 4 launches.
For players who have been burned before by missing a limited cosmetic and watching it disappear permanently, this is a real quality-of-life shift. For players who completed every season to earn exclusive items, the carve-outs around Prestige and Ultimate path content should preserve some of that sense of earned exclusivity.
The pricing is the honest friction point. Paying $10 to $20 for a bundle that was previously earnable through gameplay will sting for some players, but it is a better situation than the item simply not existing in the store at all. Whether the community lands on that framing or pushes back on the cost will likely shape how aggressively the studio expands the program into later seasons. Check out the Battlefield 2042 guides for tips on making the most of each season's content before it rotates out, or browse the broader gaming guides hub for more live service game coverage.








