
Luckily, Warzone is free to play, but you’re still going to require that 100GB of download space to play it. Essentially, it’s a hell of a huge download if you don’t already have Call of Duty: Modern Warfare and it’s patched up, but you don’t need to pay or to own Modern Warfare to actually play it. Now that you know whether or not you can download Warzone without Call of Duty: Modern Warfare, it should be a little bit easier for you to plug and play into the Battle Royale mode that we know you’ve been absolutely frothing to try. That doesn’t mean that you get automatic free access to Modern Warfare – you still have to own it to play the content associated with that title but the Warzone mode that is enabled after your download is free to access for everyone regardless. Sure, you have to download a whole ton of data – we’re talking 100GB worth – to play it if you don’t already have Modern Warfare installed, and the way that the two are set out in the or PlayStation interfaces might confuse you, but you need that entire download if you don’t already have Modern Warfare installed on your device. But we want to make it very clear that you do not have to own Call of Duty: Modern Warfare to actually play Warzone. Unfortunately, as you would have gathered from the discrepancy in file size for downloading Warzone content that changes based on whether you already have Call of Duty: Modern Warfare installed, it’s impossible to actually download the two separately.


We’ve already got the news about how big the actual update files are if you already have Modern Warfare downloaded versus if you don’t, so we can understand if you might be worried that the game is only free to those who currently already own Modern Warfare. It’s definitely free to play, but some people might be a little confused as to how it ties into Call of Duty: Modern Warfare. So, you want to try out Call of Duty: Warzone and you’ve heard that it’s free to play.
