The complete low-down
- by Ben Kerry
Today’s squad-based FPS Delta Force lands on consoles mere days from now – bringing a narrative campaign, an extraction offering and a complete PvP multiplayer package to Xbox Series X|S.
Because of that, we’re rounding up every crucial bit of intel in advance of the shooter’s imminent Xbox arrival – covering its launch date, precise drop times, install size and a whole lot more.
Without wasting another second, here’s the full rundown on Delta Force for Xbox Series X|S:
Delta Force Xbox Console Launch Day
Delta Force deploys on Xbox Series X|S (alongside PS5) on August 19th, 2025.
Delta Force Launch Hours On Xbox
If you’re playing from the States, you can actually jump in a little earlier than the official date. Delta Force will unlock on Xbox at 7 pm PT / 10 pm ET on August 18th (translating to 3 am BST / 4 am CEST on August 19th).
Storage Footprint on Xbox Series X|S
Delta Force weighs in around 97.84 GB on Xbox Series X|S, so you may want to clean up some drive space ahead of the download.
Does Delta Force Cost Anything on Xbox?
The short answer is no charge – Delta Force arrives as a completely free-to-play offering on Xbox consoles.
This no-cost rollout includes every Delta Force mode from day one, such as its Black Hawk Down-flavoured campaign. Folks wanting extra flair can still snag an optional pre-order bundle from the Xbox Store, packed with various cosmetics.
Will Delta Force Be On Xbox Game Pass?
Since it’s launching free-to-play, the title doesn’t need to appear on Xbox Game Pass proper.
That said, the devs have plenty of perks incoming for players – including a set of Game Pass extras – so subscribers will still score some goodies. Additional specifics accompany this early Xbox footage right below:
Excited for Delta Force to touch down on Xbox? Let us know your thoughts in the comment thread.
Ben moonlights as a News Writer at Pure Xbox and loves hectic firefights, blistering racing laps and any Xbox experience that lets him pull a virtual trigger. When he isn’t white-knuckling a controller, he’s spinning tunes that are embarrassingly retro, yelling at televised football matches and almost certainly scarfing pizza somewhere.