Call Of Duty Warzone Support Drops on PS4 and Xbox One

Call Of Duty Warzone Support Drops on PS4 and Xbox One

Call of duty warzone support is ending on PS4 and Xbox One later this year, and the first cutoff arrives on June 4th. Activision will remove the game from storefronts on that date, ending downloads on the older consoles before the in-game store disappears on June 25th.

June 4th Cutoff

June 4th is the key date for current PS4 and Xbox One players because Warzone will no longer be available to download on those systems. After that, the only route forward is a PS5 or Xbox Series S / X console, with current-generation hardware now the requirement for continued access once the later shutdown steps hit.

June 25th brings the next restriction: Activision will remove the in-game store in Warzone on PS4 and Xbox One. That narrows the remaining support window for last-gen players and clears out the final purchasing option inside the older versions before playability ends later this year.

Modern Warfare 4 On Switch 2

Modern Warfare 4 is the other half of the announcement, and it arrives on PS5, Xbox Series S / X, and Nintendo’s Switch 2. It is the first Call of Duty title to launch on the Switch 2, which puts the series on a new platform while the older Warzone versions are being phased out.

$499 launch pricing and the $150 increases on the PS5 and Xbox Series X over the past year make the hardware shift harder to ignore for players still on PS4 and Xbox One. Microsoft’s 10-year deal with Nintendo also sits in the background here, since the same-day announcement tied Warzone’s old-console exit to a wider current-gen push.

Season 6 To Season 1

Later this year, players on PS4 and Xbox One will need to upgrade to keep playing Warzone once season 6 of Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 finishes. The game then stops being playable when Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 4 season 1 begins, making the move off last-gen consoles the practical next step for anyone who wants to stay in the ecosystem.

That leaves older-console players with a clear deadline and a narrow set of choices: buy current-generation hardware or lose access to Warzone on the machines they already use. Activision has set the sequence already, and the June dates show the cutoff is not a distant concept but a staggered pullback that starts with downloads, then storefront features, then play itself.

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