News - Aydan Cheating $100,000 Warzone 2. 0 Tournament
Recently, there has been a $100,000 tournament in War Zone 2. That's right, they held a tournament that was a 2v2 kill race in public lobbies. There are so many bugs and glitches going on in this game that it's beyond me, but today we're going to be taking a look at Aiden's gameplay from that tournament and seeing whether or not he had any assistance throughout.
So let's crack on with the article. We're going to be reacting to a article that agents put up on his channel. This is him playing in the hundred thousand-dollar tournaments. You've got to remember as well that Aiden is somebody who has never really had the most such thing there's been moments because, when it comes to his map knowledge and the whereabouts of enemies, he seems to have that next-level ability of just predicting where they're going to be.
What kind of lobby is this, and remember. I think it's disgusting that Activision is allowing this, or whoever's actually in charge of setting up this tournament, to set it up as a 2v2 kill rate until it is custom lobbies, and until they can put them in one of these whitelisted lobbies, they shouldn't really be running tournaments.
This is just going to be the start of how bad it was in a war zone. Imagine playing a casual game after working and getting shit on by a group of people in a war zone. You have two separate teams of two running rampant in this lobby, and a couple of the people in this lobby are low for you as well, like their ranks are low.
It's not too bad, but there are people in this game who are low-level. I just don't think it's fair to the majority of the player base that you have people running tournaments and public lobbies, and then the people in those tournaments, you know, have hundreds of suspicious clicks, whether that beeping was on one or war zone two, there are Clips out there.
Now that you're outside, G. Smith seems to be on a rampage here as well, and take into consideration, guys, that we've recently done a article showing you somebody who may or may not have been cheating, and you couldn't see any cheats on the show. Okay, think about the map awareness the way it's about to make you think about how many kills Aiden's on compared to how many kills that guy was on in that article.
TV is definitely somebody who can be used as an example, as some of his articles do demonstrate very similar behaviors to what we see when we watch the larger streamers—not all of them, by the way, but some, and my suspicions are both a number of them but not all of them. I'm saying there may well have been an active UAB prior to him pushing to that location for him to know those three were in there, or maybe proximity chat was showing their names pop up, showing them now.
That was a weird transfer from one to the other again, guys. Thank you, so now this is game one of series two, and remember this is all before the final, so nobody's actually won the big money or anything yet; it's all just building up to it with the qualifiers and the stage groups. No, they're not; on the back, yeah, I'm here at the shack in front of me, and then behind us, he's, like, behind this ridge or something; he could be going to the water.
Okay, do you know that guy who's there right now? Then we stand on the UAV. They don't understand that, like. Aidan's movements and stuff in that situation are still like next level, but there is always something about his map awareness that's always like it doesn't make sense, and if you remember this excuse in War Zone One and Modern Warfare 2019, it was that he had a very expensive headset that costs 900 dollars, and that's how we could tell where enemies were based off audio no matter the distance, foreign.
We can't barely say anything about that, but it did look like a snap.