Cheating is a well-known problem in Call of Duty: Warzone. One streamer even does it in front of viewers and exposes himself live.
Call of Duty streamer CPT.Baldy is in the middle of a Warzone match when his chat notices suspicious wallhacks. The player wants to call up the task manager in his defence and prove that he is not cheating and in doing so accidentally opens the main menu of his cheating software. The software and all the settings used by CPT.Baldy can then be seen live in the stream.
Twitch ban follows immediately
The real irony of the situation lies in the title of the stream. The broadcast was titled: “People think I have hacks…lol”. This will have been one of the CoD player’s last streams for now, as the use of hacking or bot software is clearly prohibited in the Twitch guidelines. Since the unmasking, the channel can no longer be found on Twitch either.
Warzone hacker gets exposed live while defending himself not cheating… then shows his cheats
Gotta be one of the best exposes I have ever seen lmao pic.twitter.com/YftdZE48fQ
— Jake Lucky (@JakeSucky) August 18, 2021
An old problem with new dimensions
The problem with cheating software has been an ongoing issue since the Warzone release in March 2020. It is all the more important that the community increasingly reacts to the cheating attempts and exposes cheaters like CPT.Baldy. A new anti-cheat system is already being developed for the new game “CoD: Vanguard”, which should also be applicable to the Battle Royale mode Warzone.