Mobile Game / Apr 22, 2026

Eternal Prison breaks out: CODM Season 4 goes live with new toys, new events, and a clear message to ex-Warzone Mobile players

Call of Duty: Mobile Season 4, Eternal Prison, went live on April 22 (5 PM PT) with the usual seasonal core: a new Battle Pass, store drops, and gameplay additions designed to reset the weekly routine. The headline here is momentum. With Warzone Mobile recently shutting down, CODM becomes the most obvious “landing spot” for displaced mobile Call of Duty players—and Season 4 is timed like a welcome mat. The season announcement highlights new additions such as a new weapon (DP27 LMG) and a new Battle Royale class, plus a major crossover event push (Monsterverse: Godzilla x Kong) that’s built to dominate social feeds and keep players logging in for limited-time unlocks. For gamers, the impact is simple: CODM continues to strengthen its identity as the long-tail mobile home for the franchise—less experimental, more reliable, and constantly refreshed. If you play CODM casually, seasons like this are your best value window (more rewards, more activity, bigger player population). If you’re competitive, it’s also when the meta shifts hardest—new gear, new loadouts, and the inevitable first-week chaos where everyone tests the shiny stuff at once.

Eternal Prison breaks out: CODM Season 4 goes live with new toys, new events, and a clear message to ex-Warzone Mobile players

Call of Duty: Mobile Season 4, Eternal Prison, went live on April 22 (5 PM PT) with the usual seasonal core: a new Battle Pass, store drops, and gameplay additions designed to reset the weekly routine. The headline here is momentum. With Warzone Mobile recently shutting down, CODM becomes the most obvious “landing spot” for displaced mobile Call of Duty players—and Season 4 is timed like a welcome mat.

The season announcement highlights new additions such as a new weapon (DP27 LMG) and a new Battle Royale class, plus a major crossover event push (Monsterverse: Godzilla x Kong) that’s built to dominate social feeds and keep players logging in for limited-time unlocks. For gamers, the impact is simple: CODM continues to strengthen its identity as the long-tail mobile home for the franchise—less experimental, more reliable, and constantly refreshed.

If you play CODM casually, seasons like this are your best value window (more rewards, more activity, bigger player population). If you’re competitive, it’s also when the meta shifts hardest—new gear, new loadouts, and the inevitable first-week chaos where everyone tests the shiny stuff at once.

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