Bethesda has officially pulled back the curtain on Starfield's next major evolution, and it's arriving all at once on April 7, 2026. Three things are landing simultaneously: a substantial free update called Free Lanes, a new paid story expansion called Terran Armada, and the game's long-awaited PlayStation 5 debut. For a title that's had a quietly turbulent three years since launch, this coordinated drop is shaping up to be its most significant moment since the original release.
The Free Lanes update is the piece that players have been most vocal about wanting. The central addition is Cruise Mode — a system that lets you actually fly between planets within a star system, rather than jumping through loading screens at every turn. Along the way, you'll encounter dynamically generated "Space Encounters," giving players new reasons to slow down and engage with the space between destinations. New points of interest, new crew members, and a fresh resource system called X-Tech (which can be used to re-roll legendary item effects and customize gear) round out the free content. Bethesda's lead creative producer Tim Lamb has described Free Lanes as the biggest update since launch and "the best version of Starfield for new, returning, and existing players." That's the kind of claim that invites scrutiny, but the patch notes suggest he's not overstating it.
The Terran Armada DLC, priced at $9.99, introduces a new faction — a militaristic post-Earth society of robot soldiers with unclear motives — and a galaxy-spanning questline that doesn't anchor itself to a single location the way Shattered Space did. A new companion named Delta, a reprogrammed Armada robot you can customize with personality settings and colors, accompanies you through the expansion. Players who purchased the Premium Edition will receive Terran Armada at no additional charge. The DLC also brings five new bounty hunting missions through the Trackers Alliance content, for those who've already exhausted that earlier content pack.
As for the PS5 version: arriving two and a half years after the Xbox and PC launch, Starfield reaches Sony's platform with full DualSense integration — adaptive triggers, haptic feedback, lightbar, and touchpad support — and on PS5 Pro, players get an additional Pro Performance Mode that pushes for a higher target framerate. It's a long time to wait, but the coincidence with Free Lanes and Terran Armada means PS5 newcomers are stepping into the most complete version of the game yet. For a game that has always polarized, this April 7 package might finally be the version that converts the fence-sitters.
