Call of Duty: Vanguard’s final beta weekend remains live and extended until September 22 across all platforms, but players are already facing off against hackers. this is often Call of Duty: Vanguard’s second multiplayer beta weekend, and it added cross-play across PlayStation, Xbox, and PC. Unfortunately, it also brought the nefarious hackers, who are ruining matches with the standardmixture of cheats, like aimbot and wallhacks to ascertain and shoot opponents through walls. Some players also are posting clips of hackers ending the matches early, which are abruptly concluded with the message that the host ended the sport.
Wait this cheater had walls in the Vanguard Beta and when we called him out he made the whole game end. I’m actually mindblowd! pic.twitter.com/2rz9ARSOVd
Tweet
— EasyStomps (@EasyStomps) September 19, 2021
Activision continuously works to ban cheaters in Call of Duty, with over 100,000 accounts already banned, and it seems players who have already been hardware banned for Warzone are finding they’re also banned within the Vanguard beta. While this does help to scale backthe amount of cheaters, players are still encountering many hackers in Call of Duty.
Hacking within the Vanguard beta is extremely concerning, but hopefully the cheaters are going to be better kept cornered once Call of Duty’s new anti-cheat system arrives later this year with integration of the new Warzone Pacific map. The first beta weekend already provided developers feedback for working to enhance Vanguard’s audio and visual issues, and a couple of changes were implemented to assist visibility for this second beta weekend. Players were ready to try a variety of maps and modes, which incorporates Vanguard’s new Gunfight-style Champion Hill mode. Call of Duty: Vanguard will arrive on Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S, PS4, PS5, and PC on November 5. the autumn release remains on schedule as Activision Blizzard faces a lawsuit from the state of California over alleged harassment and discrimination against women.