GAMING
Fallout 76 Lands on PS5 and Xbox Series This Summer, With a Catch
Fallout 76’s free PS5 and Xbox Series X/S upgrade starts public testing in June 2026 with 60fps, VRR and 4K, though the base PS5 is capped at 1440p.
Fallout 76 is finally getting native PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X/S versions, almost eight years after the game first shipped. Bethesda, the Microsoft-owned publisher behind the Fallout series, confirmed the current-gen upgrade in its Season 25 patch notes, with a free public test starting in June 2026 and the full release following later this summer. The upgrade targets 60 frames per second, variable refresh rate, and 4K resolution on select hardware.
There’s an odd wrinkle in the fine print. The standard PS5 is capped at 1440p, while the Xbox One X, a console Microsoft launched back in 2017, renders Fallout 76 in full 4K.
What the Free Upgrade Delivers
This is the first time Bethesda has built a present-gen version of Fallout 76, rather than letting current consoles run the old code through backward compatibility. The studio laid out the plan inside the patch notes for the Season 25 update, and the headline is a free upgrade for anyone who already owns the game on any platform.
The test build hits the PlayStation and Xbox stores in June, and Bethesda says the finished version arrives later in the summer. An exact launch date is still missing; the studio expects to name one once the public test gets going. Here is what the current-gen build promises, according to the technical breakdown Bethesda outlined in its Infestations release notes:
- A target of 60 frames per second across Xbox Series X, Xbox Series S, PS5, and PS5 Pro
- Variable refresh rate (VRR, which syncs the console’s output to a compatible display to cut screen tearing) on Series S, Series X, PS5, and PS5 Pro
- Improved shadows and longer draw distances, so distant terrain pops in less abruptly
- Test versions free to download for every existing owner, with no separate purchase
For a game that has run at a locked 30fps on consoles since 2018, doubling the frame target is the single biggest change most returning players will feel.
A 2017 Xbox Outruns the Base PS5 on Resolution
The resolution chart is where the upgrade gets strange. Bethesda is pushing 4K to three machines: the Xbox Series X, the PS5 Pro, and the Xbox One X. The base PS5 is held to 1440p, the same ceiling as the PS4 Pro. So Sony’s current entry console renders fewer pixels than a Microsoft box that has been on sale since November 2017.
| Platform | Resolution | 60fps target | VRR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Xbox Series X | 4K | Yes | Yes |
| Xbox Series S | Not specified | Yes | Yes |
| PS5 Pro | 4K | Yes | Yes |
| PS5 | 1440p | Yes | Yes |
| Xbox One X | 4K | No | No |
| PS4 Pro | 1440p | No | No |
| Xbox One / PS4 | 1080p | No | No |
The One X always had an enhanced 4K build, and Bethesda is carrying it forward; the new PS5 version simply targets a lower pixel count while it chases the frame rate instead. The trade reads worse on paper than it plays, since the base PS5 gets 60fps and VRR that the One X does not. The optics are still awkward for Sony, whose console has been a tougher sell lately after two price hikes pushed it to $649.99 and helped drive a steep drop in PS5 hardware sales.
Why Fallout 76 Took This Long to Reach Current-Gen
Fallout 76 launched in November 2018 as the first online multiplayer game in the franchise, set in the irradiated hills of West Virginia. It arrived broken. The map had no human characters, the bugs were relentless, and the early reviews were brutal enough that the game became shorthand for a botched live-service launch.
Bethesda spent years digging it out. The big turn came with the Wastelanders expansion on April 14, 2020, which added human non-player characters (NPCs, the scripted townsfolk and quest-givers the game shipped without), branching dialogue, and rival factions of settlers and raiders. More seasons, more events, and a steady drip of fixes followed, and the player base recovered into the millions.
What never changed was the underlying console version. On PS5 and Xbox Series machines, players have been running the last-gen build through backward compatibility, locked to 1080p or 1440p and 30fps. The native current-gen release closes that gap, roughly five years after these consoles arrived and seven years after the game did. Better late than the alternative, which was leaving a still-active game stuck on hardware nobody buys anymore.
Season 25 Drops Infestations and Seasonal Fishing
The upgrade rides in alongside fresh content. Season 25 carries the Infestations theme, and the marquee addition is a new combat activity built around swarms of tougher enemies that spawn in set zones on the map.
Clear out a swarm and the elite boss guarding it, and the game hands over a guaranteed four-star legendary weapon or armor piece, the top rarity tier. That is a meaningful pull for endgame players who normally grind for those drops. The update also reworks radiation resistance and the Player Ghoul mechanic and expands base-building options.
Beyond the combat, seasonal fishing opens on June 23. Bethesda is rotating fish by season, with fall, winter, and spring catches surfacing in the months ahead, a low-stakes loop for players who want something to do between events. The whole Season 25 bundle is live now, while the console upgrade test follows separately in June.
What It Means for PS5 and Xbox Owners
For owners, the math is simple. You do not rebuy anything. If you have Fallout 76 on any platform, the test build and the eventual full version cost nothing, and the game has been on Xbox Game Pass for years, so a large chunk of the audience already has access.
Timing also lines up with Microsoft’s calendar. The Xbox Games Showcase set for June 7 gives Bethesda an obvious stage to drop a firm date or fresh footage for the current-gen build, though the studio has not said it will. For Sony, the upgrade lands as the PlayStation 5 holds a large installed-base lead over the Xbox Series consoles, which makes that 1440p cap a footnote rather than a real competitive dent.
The public test opens in June. Until Bethesda names a release date, that window is all owners have to go on.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Fallout 76 PS5 and Xbox Series upgrade free?
Yes. The current-gen versions are a free upgrade for anyone who already owns Fallout 76 on any platform, including through Xbox Game Pass. There is no separate purchase for the PS5, PS5 Pro, or Xbox Series X/S build.
When does the Fallout 76 current-gen version release?
A free public test starts in June 2026, downloadable from the PlayStation and Xbox stores. Bethesda plans the full release for later this summer and says an exact date will come once the test is underway.
Does the base PS5 run Fallout 76 in 4K?
No. The standard PS5 is capped at 1440p. Full 4K is reserved for the PS5 Pro, the Xbox Series X, and, oddly, the older Xbox One X. All four of the newest machines target 60fps.
Do I need to rebuy Fallout 76 for PS5 or Xbox Series?
No. Existing owners get the native current-gen version at no cost. Your characters, progress, and purchases carry over to the upgraded build.
How do I join the Fallout 76 public test?
If you own Fallout 76, you can download the test version from the PlayStation Store or Xbox Store once it goes live in June. The test is open to all owners, not a closed beta.
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