The knowledge afforded by wallhacks is extremely valuable in a battle royale game, where smart positioning is everything. You can see both of these in use in the video above by NeMs942, a cheater that has built an audience of over 40,000 subscribers through Warzone cheat videos while (apparently) skirting a permanent ban. Wallhacks (or ESP): A magical x-ray vision that lets cheaters see every player’s location through walls at any time.īest Warzone loadouts : The gear to chooseīest M4A1 loadout Warzone : Top all-purpose AR buildsīest MP7 loadout Warzone : Effective SMG setupsīest Grau loadout Warzone : Strong AR buildsīest M13 loadout Warzone : The attachments to chooseīest Bruen Mk9 loadout Warzone : Enhance the LMGīest Kilo 101 loadout Warzone : Boost the punchy ARīest FAL loadout Warzone : Semi-auto AR boostsīest FiNN LMG loadout Warzone : Useful recoil control.Aimbot: Extreme aim assist that keeps the cheater’s reticle perfectly locked-on to an opponent's body.
Warzone cheats can take several forms, but the most common hacks listed below should be familiar to any FPS veteran. It’s clear that Infinity Ward needs more concrete anti-cheat measures, especially if Warzone is going to be supported for years to come. This news came just after a report alleging that the developer quiently banned over 20,000 accounts in a single wave.Ĭonsidering Warzone reached over 75 million total players in August 2020, 20,000 accounts is likely a drop in the bucket of total cheaters. At the end of September, right before the start of Season 6, Infinity Ward announced that it has banned over 200,000 accounts for cheating since the game’s launch. It released one blog post in April 2020 roughly outlining its security measures, then in July reminded players that modifying their games in any way can result in a ban. Warzone's current main developer, Raven Software, has been quiet on the issue of cheaters, but Infinity Ward did make a few rare statements last year.