When do RUST Servers Wipe?

Daniyal Khan Updated: Jan 9, 2025 22:29

When do RUST Servers Wipe?

If you’re a RUST player, you’ve probably noticed that wipes are an essential in-game feature. They completely reset progress. For instance, your bases, loot, and sometimes even blueprints. It’s frustrating at first, but wipes are what keeps the game fresh and fair for everyone. Let’s break down when these wipes happen and why they matter.

RUST Wipe Timetable 2025

Wipes in Rust occur frequently in the game. This gives equal playing chances and a fresh chance for all players. There’s a predictable schedule of wipes resulting in different types of wipes at set intervals.

  • Map Wipes: Each Thursday
  • BP Wipes: Every month on the last Thursday
  • Force Wipe: The month’s last Thursday
  • RUST Console Edition Wipe: Just like on RUST PC

RUST Console Edition

Rust PC and Rust console edition servers both use the same wipe cycle. This makes it seamless for players on both platforms to track when the next wipe will happen.

All Wipe Times and Dates

  • Next RUST Wipe: Every Thursday of the week.
  • RUST Console Wipe: Like PC servers, occurs on the first Thursday of every month.
  • Force Wipe: Every month on the last Thursday, typically around 11 a.m. PST, 2 p.m. EST, or 7 p.m. BST.

Private Server Wipes

Private servers are unique so they follow a different wipe cycle than official servers. It depends on the server owner when this wipe will occur. For instance, it can happen weekly, twice a week, or stick with official server timings of monthly wipes.

What Are RUST Wipes?

RUST Wipes

Wipes are what keep Rust fair and exciting. Without them, long-time players would dominate forever and new players would never get a chance to compete. Every time progress is reset, a chance is given to restart and enjoy balanced gameplay.

Map Wipe

This type of wipe removes all bases, loot, and everything built by players but leaves blueprints intact. This happens every week on official servers.

BP Wipe

A BP wipe is when all the crafting recipes learned are reset, meaning players have to gather resources and relearn everything from scratch. This is not as frequent as map wipes but just as essential for balance.

Why RUST Implemented Wipes?

RUST Implemented Wipes

Many players often question why RUST servers wipe. No one likes their hard work down the drain, but it’s important for balance in the game. Gamers playing from the beginning would reign supreme if there was no server wipe, stopping anyone else from building and gaining resources. To counter this, RUST implemented server wipes to give a fair shot to all.

Explaining Common Wipe Terms

  • RUST Server Wipe: A full reset that cleans map data and player progression.
  • RUST Console Wipe: Similar to server wipes but specific to console platforms.
  • Force Wipe: A mandatory reset tied with major updates.
  • Wipe Every: Refers to how often a server resets (e.g. weekly or monthly).
  • BP Wipes Explained: Resets blueprints so everyone starts from scratch with crafting recipes.

Final Thoughts

Wipes are annoying at first, especially when you spend hours gathering loot or building up your base. However, this is what makes Rust unique. They bring the playing field level, and it keeps things interesting for everyone. Whether you play on a PC or console, knowing when Rust servers wipe happens helps you prepare so you can jump back into the game as soon as the server resets!

Daniyal Khan
Daniyal Khan

Updated: Jan 9, 2025 22:29

I’ve been gaming since before I could properly tie my shoes, which might explain why I can nail a mid-lane gank in Dota 2 but still trip over shoelaces on occasion. With over 12,000 hours in Dota 2, I’ve probably spent more time defending the Ancient than I have doing anything remotely “productive,” unless you count explaining to my team why “mid or feed” is a valid strategy. When I’m not casting spells or clashing swords in Assassin’s Creed (I like to think I’d make a decent assassin in another life), I’m likely trying to save my team in Fortnite or squeeze in a quick game of Padel to balance out all those hours in front of a screen. Writing about video games was a natural career choice—someone had to make sure Dota players got some representation, after all. Over the past decade, I’ve cranked out close to 10,000 articles for some of the biggest names in gaming journalism, covering everything from meta shake-ups to the eternal mystery of why my support always forgets to buy wards. When I’m not typing, playing, or yelling at my screen, I’m usually watching anime and dreaming of a life where respawns are real.