CxCheats revealed the news on Discord, stating Activision has taken legal action, and as part of the litigation, the company has taken down all of its Call of Duty-related cheats and stopped supporting them. “As a result of our lawsuit with Activision, we have agreed to cease development and support for all Call of Duty related products or services sold through the site,” the statement reads. “These products will not be returning to CxCheats in any form.”
The discord has since been taken down, but a screenshot has been preserved on Reddit. CxCheats offered an array of methods for cheating and hacking your UI, from aimbots to making your radar bigger, with cheat menus retailing for $60, all of which have been removed from the store. As you might imagine, some of their loyal customers aren’t happy about support suddenly begin switched off on something that might have cost them the guts of $100. Going from cheater to cheated is no doubt a bitter pill.
At the bottom of the statement, CxCheats apologises for “any pain we’ve caused to players of Call of Duty”. The Reddit thread below it isn’t high on sympathy. “Good. The lowlifes deserve it,” reads the top comment, from user tmite11. Hacking tools for other popular FPS games and battle royale games Apex Legends and PUBG remain available.
Battling cheaters is a constant battle for many companies. PUBG has adopted a hall monitor system to report miscreants, Rainbow Six Siege has a three-pronged approach, and previously to this, Activision had initiated a system that forces players suspected of cheating to play each other. Even Fall Guys, a game that’s just over a month old, has had to deal with them.
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Related Forum: Call of Duty Forum
Source: https://www.pcgamesn.com/call-of-duty-warzone/cheats-activision
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