Call of Duty: Warzone has a big problem with cheating, enough to force popular streamers to quit the game altogether. Activision has been trying to combat the problem since last year by massively banning tens of thousands of fraudsters. War zone. As Under noted that the ban took place a day after the popular CoD streamer, Vikkstar123, announced that he would discontinue the game because people blatantly hacked hacks with no consequences.
This is why I stopped Warzone: https://t.co/7A18b1Uapp
The fact that players can blatantly hack themselves, with no repercussions, makes me think. This guy is a 2nd responder and broadcasts hours of himself.
It MUST be addressed and resolved @CallofDuty @RavenSoftware pic.twitter.com/jyfoEilyzJ
– Vikkstar ★ (@ Vikkstar123) 30 January 2021
While Activision did not say what cheat software the banned players used, the sources they spoke to Under said this wave is aimed at EngineOwning customers. The subscription scam provides cheats and hacks, not just for CoD games, but also for Battlefield, Titanfall and Star Wars titles. Activision was also targeting EngineOwning customers when it banned 20,000 accounts in September last year, and this round apparently wiped out all users of the program. In April 2020, shortly after the Battle Royale video game was released, the company launched 70,000 accounts.