Activision forces a large Call of Duty cheat supplier close
Activision forced one of the largest cheat suppliers for Call of Duty Games to stop its activities immediately. Although this will not solve all the problems, it is a big step in the right direction to make Call of Duty free of cheaters, although existing measures to combat cheating in Modern Warfare 2 are not quite perfect.
Unfortunately, Call of Duty Games always had big problems in this regard. And she is not alone. If the shooter is multiplayer, then there will always be a cheater in it. This is the sad reality of online games. In the third season, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 appeared more anti-chief updates, but this did not bring a significant effect, since cheaters continue to attend online servers. No matter how hard the studio tries, gamers will always find a way to get around these measures, and more radical measures to combat cheaters can be more effective.
The supplier of the cheats in question is mobius. The Texzone Reddator published a screenshot from the chat confirming the receipt of the order from the Activision on the termination of its activities. Other cheaters took this news very well: the message received 50 answers with Emoji "Clown". Of course, there is one thing that they could do in order to avoid this whole situation – just not to read in Call of Duty.
Recently, game studios have been playing strongly on cheat suppliers. More recently, one of the sellers of cheats for Destiny 2 lost the Bungie trial, as a result of which it turned out to be a million. In this context, Activision showed mercy, first providing the opportunity to stop their activities. It is possible that the suppliers themselves saw this case and did not really want to get involved in an expensive trial against megacorporation. This is certainly an excellent approach. An attempt to stop the cheaters at the in -game level is a losing battle, and if the publishers understand this, then gamers can expect more such actions in the future.