With the Call of Duty: Warzone hacker drama showing no signs of slowing down, a Facebook streamer explained how he is able to deceive and comfortably resist Activision’s countermeasures.
By going ‘Boricua Rage Gaming’ on Facebook, a streamer, who considers himself a ‘mud’ rather than a ‘hacker’, has become popular because he shows viewers the point of view of someone who uses cheats. By promoting transparency, he has revealed exactly how he cheats in Warzone and is able to do so despite developers’ efforts.
Warzone launched in March 2020 and the biggest ban wave of the Infinity Ward title occurred on September 28 when about 20,000 accounts were permanently suspended due to the detection of unauthorized hacking software. Now Treyarch and Raven Software have entered Cold War integration with Black Ops, but fraudsters remain commonplace.
In an interview with Rara from YouTube, who earlier revealed how Warzone’s competitors were reverse reinforcement in bone lobbies for farm content, Boricua Rage shared his perspective on how easy it is to get royal in CoD’s fight.
Boricua Rage, who remarked that he broke in after killing one and started streaming his cheats live in August, explains that he is “just a normal player like the rest of us.” Furthermore, he would rather be called a mudslinger than a hacker because he ‘is not the one who broke the game’.
In terms of the specific process for hacking – or as he would prefer, modding – Boricua Rage found a site he was comfortable with, based on reviews and the ease of the process. After that, he chose to buy a hack that allows ‘spoofs’ (hiding his IP address) and both Aim FOV (control of the field of view and distance of the aimbot) and ESP (Extra Sensory Perception), which allows the information of others users – including location by walls and even weapons in use).
After purchasing the hood, the next step is to avoid bans. In the September ban wave, which Boricua Rage calls ‘the big, big, big, big, big, big ban wave’, he lost a total of 80 accounts. But that was only a small obstacle, as he claims he can use new ones weekly because he has a partner who joins them. ‘

Hackers will usually not be seen with high-level taxes like these, as they regularly need new bills.
As Boricua Rage explains, constantly creating new accounts is one way to ward off Activision’s efforts, and on the part of hackers, updating engines is another way. While new accounts circumvent shadow bans and permanent bans, engine creators will also update their software as soon as developers’ anti-cheat tracking programs discover their current hacks.
In summary, he explains the efforts to curb hacking as a tug of war between software engineers on both sides: ‘There are a lot of smart people working against it. It’s just an endless war, you know? If they do something, the other guys take a little catch up. ‘