Rust Goes Built Different: Unity 6, the M16A2 and the June Force Wipe Explained
The June 4, 2026 force wipe shipped a new player model, a Unity 6 engine upgrade, BDU gear and the M16A2. Here is what changed, what it means for server performance, and how to pick your next wipe server.
Facepunch shipped Built Different, Rust's June 2026 monthly update, on Thursday June 4. As always with the first Thursday of the month, it arrived as a force wipe: every official and community map reset, along with all blueprints. But this patch is more than a routine reset. It quietly modernized the entire game underneath.
The headline changes
Why server owners are happy
Facepunch has been kind to hosts this cycle: genuine new content for players, meaningful new admin convars, and real performance wins with no extra RAM cost. The new navmesh in particular fixes one of the oldest annoyances with scientists and animals walking into walls, and the threaded handling means fewer frame spikes on busy monuments.
If you play on community servers, expect a split for a few weeks: some servers will enable the new navmesh immediately, others will wait for plugin frameworks to fully certify against Unity 6. Both choices are reasonable.
Force wipes, explained for newer players
Rust resets on a rhythm. The first Thursday of every month is the force wipe, when Facepunch ships its monthly patch and every map must regenerate. Blueprint wipes happen alongside major updates like this one. Individual community servers also run their own schedules in between, weekly, biweekly or monthly. Nothing you build is permanent, and that is the point: every wipe is a fresh race from rock to rocket launcher.
Picking your next wipe server
Fresh wipe energy is the best energy in Rust. Browse active Rust servers on GameListZone, filter by rates and wipe schedule, and get planted before the next BP meta settles.