I wanted to share some of the lesser-talked-about counters in Battlefield 6 that I’ve used, often as backups or situational tools. While anti-vehicle mines and launchers grab the spotlight, these gadgets still carve out moments of fun and impact Battlefield 6 Boosting for sale.
First up: the AV grenade, which the Engineer class can throw. It deals moderate damage to ground vehicles — nothing like a full rocket salvo, but when used cleverly (for instance throwing it onto the top of a moving vehicle) it can soften them up or finish them off if they’re already wounded. I’ve found it useful when I spot a slow-moving armour unit, throw the AV grenade onto it, hop off, pick launcher, and either finish it or force its driver to bail out.
Then we have the C-4 explosives, from the Recon class. Remotely detonated charges stacked on the same vehicle are ridiculously satisfying. In one memorable moment I snuck behind a repair tank, planted three C-4s on the rear, called my squad in for distraction, and watched the vehicle explode when the driver drove over a friction track while trying to reverse. It was one of those "gotcha" moments where you felt clever. The Recon class often gets overlooked in pure vehicle-counter talk, but when you have the patience and stealth, the reward is fantastic.
Another tool: the Laser Designator (also Recon). It doesn’t directly damage vehicles, but painting targets makes it easier for yourself or your teammates using guided launchers to lock-on and destroy. One round, I used the designator to mark a mobile anti-air vehicle hidden near a spawn point; a teammate then locked and fired a missile. That singular chain reaction shifted the air-denial layer of that map in our favour buy Battlefield 6 Boosting.
These gadgets aren’t always front-and-centre — they require more thought, stealth or preparation — but that’s exactly why they’re fun to me. They give you alternative ways to approach vehicle counters rather than just “rocket and kill”. It lets you switch up your playstyle: become the behind-enemy-lines operator, the trap-setter, the paint-and-execute guy.
menu
menu
Menu
Login or register to post your reply