I've always been the type to finish a nail-biter and instantly wonder, "Okay, did I actually carry… or did it just feel like it?" If you're trying to dial in your improvement (or you just like receipts), it helps to know where the game hides the good stuff. The nice part is you don't need to jump through hoops anymore, and even if you're warming up in something like a Battlefield 6 Bot Lobby, the same habit applies: check your numbers while they're fresh, not hours later when you've already rewritten the match in your head.
Finding the stats without digging
Back in the main lobby, head straight for the top bar where your player card sits and slide over to Profile. On PC it's just a click; on console you're nudging right a couple times. This screen gives you the big snapshot stuff first: overall K/D, win rate, score per minute, total kills. Then it gets more useful. You'll see revives, captures, and the other "boring" stats that usually explain why your team actually won. Scroll a bit and it starts splitting things out by class and kit, plus your most-used weapons and gadgets, even the ones you swear you never touch.
Progression is where the real story lives
If you want more than a highlight reel, hop one tab over into Progression. That's where you can drill down into accuracy, headshot rate, and how different weapon setups are treating you. It's also great for specialists—healing output, resupply totals, spotting, the whole lot. I like that vehicles get their own lanes too, so you can separate "I can fly" confidence from "I survived by luck" reality, whether you're in a transport heli or a tank you stole off spawn.
Quick checks you can actually use next match
What makes the menu worth using is how fast it updates. On a PS5 it pops almost instantly, and on a decent PC it's the same deal. Even on older hardware it's usually a second or two, not a long wait. I've tested it the simple way: finish a round, back out, open Profile, and see if the last match is already baked in. It almost always is. That speed matters because you can make small calls right away—swap an attachment, change your role, or stop forcing a weapon that's clearly not landing.
A small experiment that sold me
I ran a basic ten-match check in Conquest on Orbital, sticking to Assault with the M5A3 and a short barrel, keeping everything else steady. I tracked my hip-fire hits the old-fashioned way, just to see if the game was hand-waving the numbers. When the report came back with 37.2% hip-fire across 842 shots, it lined up with what I logged. That kind of accuracy is exactly why I keep coming back to the stats pages, whether I'm sharpening up for ranked nights or messing around in a Bf6 bot lobby to test muscle memory without the pressure of a full sweat stack.