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Valve Is Banning Dota 2 Players in the Funniest Way Possible
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We’ve seen a number of ingenious methods of banning naughty players from video games over the years, but this latest attempt from Valve may be the funniest yet.

Valve is on the warpath, clamping down on Dota 2 smurf accounts in what it has called a “bloodbath”. As part of that and the recently released Frostivus 2023 update, Valve is sending a surprise gift to Dota 2 smurf accounts, even those belonging to professional players of the company’s hugely popular MOBA.

What the unsuspecting recipients of the in-game gift, misleadingly described as a “seasonal reward”, fail to realise is it contains a “highly toxic” lump of coal that triggers a permanent ban. Really.

That’s exactly what happened to Dota 2 pro and streamer Mason "mason" Venne, who was surprised to see his account banned after opening the gift from Valve in a clip now being widely shared online.

Epá, muito bom. :lol:
 
Activision crushed another 27,000 Call of Duty cheaters over the weekend
As shared by Charlie Intel on X, Activision has shared a statement saying, "#TeamRICOCHET identified and banned over 27,000 accounts over the weekend through a series of upgraded detection systems. The team is progressing on a new set of security updates and anticipates more ban waves to come."

There have been reports of streamers also receiving bans from this wave, but according to Charlie Intel, Activision isn't confirming any specific bans.

Last month, Activision disabled one of the Ricochet telemetry systems. Cheat developers mistakenly thought the system was down completely, leading to a further 6,000 Call of Duty accounts being caught out for cheating.
27k contas. :wow:

Deve ser mesmo rentável andar a vender hacks e tretas para arruinar as experiências alheias. :facepalm:
 
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