Battlefield 6 Now Lets You Reroll Annoying Challenges (But RNG Might Still Screw You)
Tired of that "Get 50 headshots while standing on one leg using only a flare gun" challenge? Well, DICE has finally thrown us a bone. Sort of.
They just announced a new feature rolling out for Battlefield 6: Challenge Rerolling. The idea is simple: if you get stuck with a Daily or Weekly challenge that's completely against your playstyle or just plain annoying, you can now ditch it and try your luck with a different one. Just head to the challenges tab, select the one you hate, and hit the reroll option.
How Many Mulligans Do You Get?
Now, here's the catch. DICE knows we'd just keep rerolling until we got "Breathe 10 times," so they've limited the number of rerolls you get. And, surprise surprise, it depends on how much money you gave them.
Daily Challenges:
Everyone (including free REDSEC players): Gets one reroll per day.
Battlefield 6 Owners: Get one additional reroll (total of 2).
Battlefield Pro Owners: Get another additional reroll (total of 3).
So, if you went all-in on Pro, you get three chances daily to ditch a crappy challenge. Dailies reset at 04:00 UTC.
Weekly Challenges:
Everyone: Gets three rerolls per week.
Battlefield 6 Owners: Get one additional reroll (total of 4).
Battlefield Pro Owners: Get another additional reroll (total of 5).
Premium players get five shots per week to reroll those sometimes-grindy weeklies. Weeklies reset every Tuesday at 12:00 UTC.
No Guarantees, Just Hope
DICE is also quick to manage expectations. Since challenges are randomized for everyone, rerolling doesn't guarantee you'll get something better. You might just swap "Get 10 kills with C4 while parachuting" for "Destroy 5 tanks with a repair tool." It's still RNG, just with a few extra dice rolls.
Still, it's a welcome addition. Anything that gives us a chance to avoid the truly obnoxious or playstyle-breaking challenges is a plus. It might actually make engaging with the challenge system less of a chore. We'll see how the reroll odds actually feel in practice.