Treyarch blocks 136,000 more Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 accounts due to cheating
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Developer Treyarch has announced that it has blocked another 136,000 accounts that have been cheating in Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 and Warzone. In its detailed update, the team acknowledged that cheaters "have a significant impact on the experience of our community" and assured that it is actively working to solve this problem throughout 2025.
Here's What We Know
The team is introducing new levels of security and protection, updated cheat detection models, and systems for spam reports. Players can expect new mechanisms for detecting and punishing cheaters.
With the start of the second season, which begins on 28 January, players will receive new detection systems and significant driver updates. Treyarch also emphasised that spam reports do not affect the penalty system, as only the first report from each player is taken into account.
Also, the authors do not plan to use IP-based bans to combat cheating, as a ban can go to a group within a range that is not a cheater. For example, a college campus or an Internet cafe could be hit by a wave of IP-based bans if only one computer is blocked.
In general, the problem with cheaters in Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 is very big and some players have left the game because of it, so Activision needs to do something about it as soon as possible.
Source: Treyarch