Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II is free to play for the next seven days

TechSpot is about to celebrate its 25th anniversary. TechSpot means tech analysis and advice you can trust.

In a nutshell: Activision is hosting a free seven day trial of Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II’s multiplayer mode to celebrate the arrival of season three and it gets going here shortly. Free access begins on April 19 at 10 a.m. Pacific and runs through April 26 at 10 a.m. across all platforms.

Participants will have access to six core 6 v 6 maps – Shoot House, Dome, Shipment, Farm 18, Himmelmat Expo, and Pelayo’s Lighthouse – as well as four gunfight maps – Blacksite, Exhibit, Alley, and Shipment – and the battle map Santa Sena.

Playable 6v6 game modes include domination, gun game, team deathmatch, hardpoint, grind, kill confirmed, infected, all or nothing, and one in the chamber. On the battle map, you will be able to play invasion or ground war.

Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II launched on October 28, 2022, across all major platforms minus the Nintendo Switch. It is the nineteenth mainline game in a long-running franchise that somehow manages to raise the bar time and again. The latest release broke several sales records en route to becoming the fastest CoD title to generate $1 billion in revenue.

Related reading: Nearly two decades of Call of Duty

The new Modern Warfare II is a direct sequel to 2019’s Modern Warfare, which was a reboot of the original from 2007. The first Modern Warfare was the fourth game in the series and the first to be set in modern times instead of the World War II era. It proved to be a real turning point for the series. In fact, that game is one of a dozen being considered for induction into the 2023 World Video Game Hall of Fame class.

Microsoft, meanwhile, is still trying to win over support for its planned acquisition of Activision Blizzard. The Redmond-based tech giant has already signed 10-year Call of Duty distribution deals with multiple companies including Nvidia and Nintendo, the latter of which would bring the franchise to the Switch.

Read More
Bong Lupo

Latest

Everything you need to know about Greek yogurt and how it can meet your nutrition needs

Recipes Two-ingredient cheesecake. Turkish-style pasta. Baked yogurt toast. Bagels....

Cook This: 3 recipes from Istanbul, including one of Turkey’s favourite breakfasts

Recipes Özlem Warren shines a light on the culinary...

Green Sauce Tofu and More Recipes We Made This Week

Recipes It’s no secret that Bon Appétit editors cook...

Newsletter

Don't miss

Everything you need to know about Greek yogurt and how it can meet your nutrition needs

Recipes Two-ingredient cheesecake. Turkish-style pasta. Baked yogurt toast. Bagels....

Cook This: 3 recipes from Istanbul, including one of Turkey’s favourite breakfasts

Recipes Özlem Warren shines a light on the culinary...

Green Sauce Tofu and More Recipes We Made This Week

Recipes It’s no secret that Bon Appétit editors cook...

Marshmallow Creme vs. Fluff: The Sweet and Sticky Showdown

Recipes Skip to main content Taste of Home Taste of Home Do...

13 Real Business Trip Stories That Prove Work Travel Collects More Stories Than Miles

Real business trips almost never go the way the itinerary promised. They start with a confidently-packed suitcase and an eight-page agenda, and somewhere between the airport gate and the hotel breakfast they quietly turn into something nobody could have invented — equal parts comedy, chaos, and unscheduled adventure. These 13 real business trip moments are exactly that kind of work-trip plot

Your business texts could look like scam messages from July 1 if you don’t act now

From July 1, any branded SMS your business sends without a registered sender ID will be labelled “Unverified” and grouped with scam messages.  What’s happening: From 1 July 2026, any business or organisation that sends SMS using a branded name, such as “MyShop” or “AcmeServices”, instead of a phone number, must have that sender ID

Business groups are fighting Labor’s CGT changes. Here is where SMEs stand

Labor’s most contested tax reform in a generation cleared its first formal hurdle on Thursday and immediately ran into organised resistance. Treasurer Jim Chalmers introduced the government’s tax reform legislation to the House of Representatives on 28 May, bundling together four budget measures: the capital gains tax overhaul, new limits on negative gearing, a $250