Warzone streamer accuses player of fraud in Gulag, apparently they were just better

Warzone’s burglary problem is still causing legitimate players, but the problem has become so serious that the number of false accusations is increasing.

Warzone is certainly no stranger to fraud. In fact, season 1 games have been flooded with microbusters, wall hackers, and gamers using game-breakers to gain an unfair advantage. Despite numerous bans and the abolition of cheat sites, Activision has failed to control the fraud problem that is still going on in Warzone.

Since the games launched, many Call of Duty streamers have spoken out about Warzone’s flimsy anti-cheat system. Things got so bad that players liked it NICKMERCS decided to end competitive Warzone tournaments. Due to the competitive nature of the game and the large number of fraudsters, it can sometimes be difficult to determine if players are really hacking.

Warzone streamer fraud charge

Warzone spectators
RussDaddy (Twitch)

It can often be difficult to tell who is cheating and who is not in Warzone.

After all, ‘100 thieves’ Tommey recently apologized because he falsely accused a rival in the Twitch Rivals event. This not only led to the player being disqualified from the competition, but also to a major setback from fellow spectators who jumped on the scam.

It is certainly not uncommon to be branded as a cheat in Warzone, especially not when almost every lobby has players with aimbot and wallhacks going on. But now another legitimate player has called himself a cheater.

Reddit user, felineprotector has uploaded a clip of them hitting Warzone Streamer RussDaddy in the Gulag. “Nothing feels better than being called a hacker by a streamer if you’re legal,” says the cat protector. This comes after RussDaddy claimed they cheated after the streamer lost his Gulag match.

The Gulag strategy of Felineprotector seems so well calculated, that it is not surprising that the streamer thought he was cheating. “If I have the side without a car, I pretend to be a bot who jumps on the seat and then bunnyhop to cut them off the car,” the Warzone player said. “Either you get it, get hit marks and have an advantage to push, or you know it’s in the calf.”

This definitely explains how RussDaddy radiated so fast, and why the streamer thought the cat protectors were hacking. The true irony of this particular encounter, however, is that the falsely accused player ran into a real hooker later in the game.

“The best part is that we end up being killed by the real hacker he mentions, just with a blatant aim.” It certainly looks like Warzone’s fraud problem is not going to go away anytime soon, but we’ll see if Activision manages to handle the problem well when the new season hits servers later this year.

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