News - How To Get Bot Lobbies Warzone 3. Warzone Vpn
Intro
I'm sure you probably see war zone streamers playing in total bot lobbies every single day, dropping 60, 70, and even 80 kill games just like it's nothing. The players in the lobbies clearly don't shoot back, and it just seems like nobody has a clue what they're doing yet. Whenever you and your friends try to play a game, it just turns out to be a total sweatfest.
Well, I'm here to reveal the secret behind how these streamers are playing in these bot lobbies and how you can too in order for the rest of this article to make sense.
What is sbmm?
Let me first explain to you what SPMM is and how Activision uses it to determine your lobbies. SPMM stands for skill-based matchmaking, which aims to match other players who are of similar skill levels, so lobbies are always balanced and fair in theory.
This basically means all the bad players are going to be playing against bad players, and all the good players are going to be playing against good players. Personally, I totally agree with this if it's in ranked mode. I just think people should have the option of deciding whether or not they want to play in these lobbies or if they want to play in a sweat lobbie.
I don't think those people who were just loading up for a couple casual games with friends should really have to be sweating this hard just to be able to compete, but anyway, that's just my opinion now.
How is sbmm used in warzone?
Now that we understand spmm, let's look at how Activision actually uses spmm. In a war zone Basically, Activision released this super long statement about a month or two ago. It went into a lot of detail about each factor of matchmaking and how they use it to determine your lobbies to save you.
reading the full article. Here are some key points. key Point number one is that ping is almost always the primary factor in what lobster you'll get put in, so they say, but I personally don't believe this to be true. But nonetheless, to save time, let's move on to point number two, which is that skill is determined based on players' overall performance, which means kills, deaths, wins, losses, mod selection, and even recent matches.
So these are basically the main points that I want to talk about, but there's way more in the article. We know that good players should be getting matched with other good players, yet clearly, when you go watch some of these streamers, let's just say the lobbies they're in are not quite the same skill level as they are, which brings.
How to dodge sbmm
Moving on to the next section, how to do skill-based matchmaking, there are now three main ways to do it: star with the method.
Method 1: twoboxing (nixstah method)
Number one, we have two boxes, and this is not really ideal for most people, but let me give you a rundown on what this is. This method has been around for years; people have been doing it since way back in the day, and it has recently been a very hot topic of controversy.
Among the war zone content scene, it's for those people who have a spare console, or in some cases, some people who actually go out to buy a second console just purely to do this, which is crazy by the way, but they basically loaded up on this second console, with a brand new account, or maybe even an account that's maybe like, let's say, a level 10, with about five kills and 100 deaths clearly a very bad beginner level player.
They load up on this account and queue for a game, and what they do is join themselves on the main account so they get put in a beginner-level lobby. Now, the reason why this has been talked about a lot recently is because a Twitter thread came out recently about a streamer named Rex, who has been found guilty of doing this.
This streamer dropped a 66-kill world record game, and here is the article that exposed him on Twitter six. Wait, chat make sure to hide the screen so I don't get a stream. Now I watched the gameplay that he uploaded of the 66 Kill game, and let's just say you can definitely tell this Lobby is not the same skill level as him now in that same thread, Nadia.
As many of you may know, in the war zone, space has openly admitted to doing this too. I mean, you got to appreciate the honesty; doing it is one thing, but just fully admitting to doing it and, you know, not lying, you kind of got it tipped up. Rex, on the other hand, was really trying to hide this; see, he's hiding his screen from stream snipers, in between Q in each game, and it's very clear that that's not what he was doing, but anyway, let's face the two boxers.
This isn't really an ideal option for most people. If you have a spare console nearby, I'm sure this will work really well, but for most people, including me , this is just too much.
Method 2: reverse boosting
Moving on to Method Number 2, it is a reverse booster. I'm sure at some point in your Call of Duty life you have tried this before, whether it's way back in the day of Modern Warfare 2.
I'm sure you guys have done a reverse boost at some point. This is the classic strategy: going into a game, killing yourself over and over again, the tanky KY, in hopes that you're going to get put in an easier lobby next time. The reality of this is that it just doesn't really work. Maybe it does for one game, but you've got to tank like 5 to 10 games before that just to get that one game.
As soon as you get that one game and you do well, the matchmaking is just going to reset itself; it's very time-consuming, and it's just not an ideal solution, which brings.
Method 3: use a vpn
On to number three, which is to use a VPN. If you don't know what a VPN is, it stands for Virtual Private Network. It basically hides your IP address to make it look like you're in a different location, but there's a special kind of VPN that you use for war zones.
What this will do is if you go to the network settings of War Zone, the network info you'll see here, you've got a geographical region if you turn on a VPN. This region is going to change to something else, depending on the server that you select. What this will do is confuse the matchmaking process.
Dodge skill-based matchmaking, and it'll just put you in the next available lobby, so if I set my server to Kenya, that doesn't mean I'm going to go play on a Kenya server. You know, I'm pretty sure there aren't even servers in Kenya, which is why this actually works the way it does. It isn't going to make you play on high ping; you're still going to play on your own normal servers, the same exact server you'll connect to, even if you don't have a VPN on.
Like I said, it's just going to confuse the matchmaking. It's going to dodge the skill-based, matchmaking side of matchmaking. And it'll just put you in the next available lobby, regardless of the skill level, so of course, with that being said, it isn't exactly going to guarantee a bot lobby every single time, but it's definitely going to be way easier if you play 10 games with a VPN and 10 games without.