counter customizable free hit Black Ops 6 Introducing the Smallest Call of Duty Map Ever Is a Strategic Choice to Favor More Crossplay – Curefym

Black Ops 6 Introducing the Smallest Call of Duty Map Ever Is a Strategic Choice to Favor More Crossplay

The next significant Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 and Warzone content update was revealed by publisher Activision on February 20. The mid-season refresh, called Season 2 Reloaded, has added a ton of content to Treyarch Studios’ most recent shooter, including the eagerly awaited Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles collaboration.

An in-game screenshot from Call of Duty: Black Ops 6.
Bullet is the smallest map in the Call of Duty history. | Credit: Activision.

Along with some iconic melee weapons, time-limited modes, a new Event Pass, and other cosmetic items, the event has introduced all four turtles to the Call of Duty universe. But it’s one of the most recent maps in the game that has the Call of Duty community talking.

Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 introduces the smallest map in the franchise history

In Season 2 Reloaded, two new multiplayer maps are added. Grind Ooze is a skate park-based remake of the well-known Black Ops 2 map. The classic three-lane map operates exactly as fans recall, with the exception of a surprise Tony Hawk teaser and some TMNT artwork. Bullet, on the other hand, was a full wildcard. The small-scale map is set on a train in motion.

In Black Ops 6 Season 2 Reloaded, Bullet quickly became a fan-favorite map despite initial concerns about how it would play. A picture of the map that only showed a single lane and a straight line really caught players off guard. Players were afraid the layout would be the worst map in CoD history because it bore a striking resemblance to a map design made in jest by a fan in 2024 that only had one hallway.

First impressions are overwhelmingly positive, so it turns out those fans were too quick to judge a book by its cover. Naturally, not everyone will enjoy this map, particularly those who would rather have a more conventional three-lane experience. So far, though, players are unable to get enough of it. Unfortunately, the map does not have its own 24/7 playlist; however, it is part of the Small Map Moshpit playlist.

How is Bullet going to favor more crossplay?

An in-game screenshot from Call of Duty: Black Ops 6.
The small surface area of the map is its key. | Credit: Activision.

When Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 first burst onto the scene, the major complaint regarding the fans was its completely overhauled movement mechanics called Omni-movement. This new movement scheme absolutely threw players all over as it was pretty tough to control. With this new system, players can slide in any direction they want, even backward.

PC players gradually learned how to use it, but it was pretty tough for the console players to do the same because they didn’t have a keyboard and mouse. However, this new map is going to settle this dispute for both parties. Because of the map’s restricted field of vision and motion, console users can move around just as freely as PC users.

Given how incredibly small and claustrophobic the map is, it essentially equalizes the omni-movement ratio across all systems. On the other hand, PC players used to complain about console players having aim-assists. So, this map is going to balance it out too as there isn’t much horizontal shifting of the cursor needed.

This post belongs to FandomWire and first appeared on FandomWire

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