Call Of Duty Mod Shut Down By Activision Hours Before Launch, Leading To Review Bombing

Activision has shut down a highly anticipated Call of Duty mod, just hours before it was due to release. The mod, H2M, was billed as a remastering of the original Modern Warfare II multiplayer experience, delivering what Activision itself did not. But it’s not going to happen Come from South African Online Casinos . As fans feared, Activision issued a cease and desist order to the developers, just like the company did with the fan-made Call of Duty SM2 mod in 2023.

“We are complying with this order and shutting down all operations immediately and permanently,” the developers said. The order to shut it down came on August 15, just a day before the modders were due to release the H2M mod on August 16.

The mod would have required a copy of 2017’s Call of Duty: Modern Warfare Remastered. In anticipation of the mod’s release, sales of Modern Warfare Remastered rose significantly on Steam. After the news abou…

Call Of Duty- Black Ops 6 Won't Have Campaign Early Access, Activision Confirms

Black Ops 6 will not have an early-access period for its narrative campaign mode, unlike prior Call of Duty titles, Activision has confirmed. The game’s campaign, multiplayer mode, and Zombies will all launch simultaneously on October 25 for “one massive global launch moment.”

Previous Call of Duty titles, including both Modern Warfare 2 and 3, allowed players who preordered to get early access to the games’ campaigns for up to a week. The early-access period has been popular with serious players, who smash through the narrative content in order to focus on multiplayer when it unlocks on global launch day.

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Fans' Reaction To $450 League Of Legends Skin Is "Justified," Riot Says

League of Legends’ controversial Immortalized Legend Ahri skin is available now for those with a spare $250-$450 to spend, and fans are still not happy about it. Game director Pu “PuPuLasers” Liu spoke with PCGamesN about the backlash, saying it’s “justified.”

“People were very upset about it, not just a little,” Liu acknowledged in the interview, adding, “I also think it’s kind of justified.” He noted that with the game being over a decade old, League of Legends players are “used to everything living under a certain price point.”

Despite that, he defended the expensive bundle, explaining that products priced at this level were a rarity, and even taking some time to explain how they fit in with League of Legends’ monetization strategy as a whole.

“These kind of products are designed for a very small percentage of our players to be able to purchase and flex,” he explained. “In terms of what role [they’re] going to play in our portfolio of skin products moving forwa…