Battlefield V Health Recover And Revive Systems, Everything We Know So Far

A lot is changing in the Battlefield franchise with the release of its upcoming World War 2 themed title. Amidst all news, the new Battlefield V Health Recover And Revive systems have been detailed, featuring full animations and a class-bound new use.

Thanks to Reddit user Haaazard, the new Battlefield V health recover And revive systems have been detailed and reported into a huge thread mentioning everything coming with the new game. In this post we’ll talk about everything mentioned in that aspect.

For starters, and possibly one of the most important changes, you no longer regen to 100 health. Health Regen now goes in stages. FAs the thread reveals, the health bar is split into 4 with 25 health per stage. If you get shot to 1 health you’ll only regen to 25 health and so on. This encourages teamplay and careful decision making.

Furthermore, health and ammo replenishing as well as reviving has their own animations. No more magically getting health or ammo by standing next to a box. You physically reach into the box and grab and pouch, or a medic will throw you one. You can grab health from a depot too, this means you don’t have to rely on medics as much to provide health.

As DICE has detailed before, Ragdoll bodies are revamped in Battlefield V. You can now drag your allies body behind cover that you may have just built in order to do the revive animation in safety. Killing also has been revamped in a dynamic way, affecting the environment realistically.

Any class can now revive but only your squad mates. The medic class will also revive quicker than other classes and will also be able to revive everyone in your team, similar to how the support class can build fortifications quicker. Also, revives no longer instantly bring you back to 100 HP unless done by a medic.

These are the most important changes happening to the Battlefield V Health Recover And Revive Systems with the release of the game. Thanks to Reddit, for once more scooping out what’s said between the lines.