Call of Duty: Warzone will never be the same again. Following the launch of Season 3, the bombs have dropped, the nuke event is over, and the brand new - or should we say, brand old - Verdansk '84 map greets players in a new era of the standalone battle royale.

In the wake of Season 2's zombie event, nuclear warheads have decontaminated Verdansk and leveled the entire area. However, that doesn't mean players have to say goodbye to the map which started it all. After a brief period when Rebirth Island was the only playable map, the clock was turned back on Verdansk, showing us a version of the city and surrounding areas as they were in 1984.

We've compiled all the intel you need to know about the updated terrain in Call of Duty: Warzone. Welcome to Verdansk '84.

Overview

Call of Duty: Warzone launched following Call of Duty: Modern Warfare in early 2020 with one map - Verdansk. The location was already explored to a degree in the campaign of Modern Warfare and in some multiplayer maps, but grew to become the star of the free to play battle royale spin off. It's been the main map of the game ever since with some slight changes over the course of the year - bunkers were opened, the stadium became accessible and a subway system became operational, among others.

When Black Ops Cold War launched, Rebirth Island joined the roster as a smaller arena of players to battle it out, but Verdansk - largely unchanged - remained the star of the show. It only makes sense that things needed a bit of a shakeup after all this time.