- [Narrator] If you've played any online multiplayer games lately, you'll know that cheaters
are a big problem. Some cheaters install hacks to make the game easier for them, or just to ruin it for everyone else. But others think they're so smart, they livestream games with
these cheats secretly on, pretending to be good
just to gain an audience. Though all it takes is
one wrong button press to reveal what they're really up to. With that said, let's take a look at even more streamers and
gamers who were caught cheating. (upbeat electronic music) IcyVixen and BeardedBanger. "Call of Duty" is one of the biggest and most competitive online
multiplayer game franchises on the market. It's so popular that Alex Zedra, the voice actor of the
game's Warcom operator, Mara, has gained more than 475,000
followers on Twitch alone. Occasionally, she helps boost smaller "Call of Duty" streamers by hosting them on her channel. But one day, while she
was hosting a streamer called IcyVixen to
thousands of her followers, she noticed that this girl
was playing well, too well. - [Gamer] We've got a vehicle here. - [Gamer] Can you get shut,
can you get one right here? - Down. - Down.
- Did you see that? The millisecond she came over the hill, she hit a far away target
that she hadn't seen before with a perfect shot. That, my friends, is sus. Vixen appeared to be using a wall hack or an aim bot, or maybe both. Wall hacks, or ESP hacks,
allows players to locate enemies through solid objects
like walls and terrain, whereas aim bots provide
better target acquisition, making it easier to hit other players. Both hacks are expressly
banned in "Call of Duty", but it seemed like
IcyVixen was two for two with that otherwise impossible shot. Rightfully annoyed, Alex did some digging and quickly discovered
IcyVixen was a model whose streaming partner, BeardedBanger, was also hacking the game. Now, most cheating streamers
feebly calibrate their hacks so that their cheating
doesn't look too obvious, but this guy was so brazen, he was trying to trick
his audience into thinking he could track enemies with
pinpoint precision like this. Ugh, pathetic. And I'm not the only one who thinks so. Wasting no time, Alex called
out the pair on Twitter. Twitch immediately shut down
both the cheaters' streams, banned them, and the embarrassing
backlash saw both of them delete all their social media accounts. But the drama didn't end there. Real gamers began trawling back
through Vixen's past streams and analyzing her play. Her aim was always perfect, even when she didn't have her
hands anywhere near setup, so it seemed she'd been
using these hacks for years, entirely undetected. Well, considering she
won't be welcomed back into the gaming community anytime soon, I hope she's better at modeling than she is at "Call of Duty". Yyyunggg. Because most online multiplayer
games and streaming sites have a zero tolerance cheating policy, streamers who use them
have to be really careful about what they show their audience. Otherwise, they could reveal
their cheating live on stream, as this next idiot demonstrated so well. Back in February 2021, aspiring "Call of Duty: Black
Ops" pro player Yyyunggg was streaming his game on Twitch, but he was playing a little too well, and his chat started
accusing him of cheating. He denied this and claimed
he could prove his innocence by opening his task manager to show he had no cheat software
running in the background, but this backfired hard. When he opened it up
and continued playing, he didn't realize his stream
now showed two different views, his game capture and the stream capture. The stream capture, which
was what he was broadcasting, looked normal, but the
game capture revealed some very sus red boxes with health bars appearing through the walls. Furious, his once-fans
and critics took no time clipping the video and
sharing it far and wide over the internet. Disgraced and ashamed, Yyyunggg quickly deleted
his social media accounts and was eventually banned from Twitch. While I imagine getting exposed hurts, accidentally exposing yourself must be a whole new level of pain. TwistedBear. Considering how competitive
"Call of Duty" is, you'd either have to be
real good or real dumb to claim you're the top
"Modern Warfare" player in your Twitch bio. Amazingly, that's just what
streamer TwistedBear did back in 2020, and I'll tell you now, this guy was about as dumb as they come. A pretty talented gamer with good stats, he started up his stream as usual, destroying his opponents from all angles, but in a god-tier idiot maneuver, he forgot to hit the
button that hid the hacks he was clearly using
from his stream capture. (gunfire rattles) For anyone who doesn't
play "Modern Warfare", I can tell you now, those yellow boxes and enemies' glowing exoskeletons that can be seen across
the map aren't normal. That's a textbook wall hack. The clip quickly started making the rounds on forum sites like Reddit, which encouraged a lot
of people to report him. Because both "Call of Duty" and Twitch have a zero tolerance
policy towards cheating, both his accounts were banned and he hasn't shown his face
again on either platform since. Well, he may have thought
of himself as a top player, but that was a noob mistake. Now, you don't need a wall hack to locate those like and
subscribe buttons down below, and you probably don't need
an aim bot to hit them. I say probably, but prove me wrong. All right, who's next? Semper0311. When gamers get caught cheating, one of two things usually happens. They either issue an emotional apology or they wordlessly disappear
from the gaming community. However, there's a third way
of dealing with the fallout, as Semper0311 demonstrated back in 2020. This little known Twitch
streamer was playing "Destiny 2" to less than 20 viewers when someone in his chat
commented that his opponents were appearing through the walls, highlighted in tell-tale red boxes. Idiotically, Semper read
the comment out perplexed, and then realized all
too late what he'd done - I had no ammo. - [Gamer] Hold on, hold on, be quiet. - My screen has the red
squares around them? - [Gamer] Oh my god. - [Narrator] Realizing he'd been caught streaming with hacks on,
Semper acted confused, pretended not to know
what the red squares were, and ended the stream. He quickly deleted the footage, but not before his followers had clipped the most damning
parts and posted them online for the whole community to see. Even then he kept on
pretending that he had no idea what this very blatant wall hack was. In later streams, he even
threatened his viewers with the ban hammer to stop
them from bringing it up. - No, it's not. No, it's not. I didn't, dude. So, again, if you want to get banned, you can keep saying that, and I'll (duck quacks) ban you, too. - [Narrator] But then he
quickly changed his tone. - But there was wall hacks
on my computer yesterday, on stream, like, I'm not denying that. I just don't know how they got there. - [Narrator] What next? Is he gonna start blaming Clara for the hacks on his computer? If you don't get that joke, go and watch part one of this series. Despite his feigned ignorance, Semper was banned from the game. I guess becoming a pro player just wasn't part of his destiny. Solista. Many game companies have
spent years developing systems to detect and ban players
that use hacks in game, but few are as good as
"Valorant's" system. This team-based first-person shooter was only recently released in 2020, but it took no time for cheaters to build a series of hacks to help them win. However, the minute the
game's Vanguard system detects someone using hacks,
it shuts down the entire match and boots the cheater to help
keep its leaderboards free from these tedious morons. But Vanguard isn't perfect, something that streamer and player Solista attempted to exploit back in April 2021. Ranked 65th out of millions
of North American players, Solista was gradually
making a name for himself in the "Valorant" community, but, all of a sudden, this
happened live on his stream. (electronics trill)
- Oh. (duck quacks) What? Really, dude? - [Narrator] Yup, Vanguard
shut the game down because it detected Solista was cheating. He may have seemed confused, but, to me, that was the least convincing really, dude I've ever heard in my life. After running away from
the problem like a baby, other gamers began analyzing
snippets of Solista's gameplay, and, in hindsight, it
looked hella suspicious. His aim dubiously snapped
onto his target's heads, and he appeared to shoot
without hitting a single button. Solista later claimed he
was using the space bar just off camera to shoot,
but the damage was done. Solista's name was removed from the ranks. His Twitch account went dark, and he hasn't shown his face online since. Paxximo. Now, streamers who use hacks, try not to make it
obvious they're doing so while they're broadcasting. Otherwise, their audience
might call them out and use the footage as evidence. Though, "Valorant" player
and Twitch streamer paxximo didn't seem to get that memo. He'd managed to dupe the
vigilant Vanguard system, but he couldn't escape the
eagle eyes of his followers back in June 2021. - [Gamer] Feeling psyched. (gunfire blasts) - [Gamer] No, way. - [Narrator] Did you see that? Let's rewind and slow down. Somehow, paxximo knew
someone was behind that wall, tracked them perfectly, and
then hit them with a headshot the minute they stepped out. Like that wasn't sus enough on its own, he also fired a perfect
shot through the smoke, even though he couldn't see the target. Rookie mistake. After several people reported him, karma quickly came knocking. - [Gamer] He's close right. - Why did my game just freeze?
- Hey, why did my, oh. - [Narrator] Now, paxximo clearly thought he was too clever to have been caught and tried to log back in
using a different account, put Vanguard was having none of it. - [Paxximo] Dude, what is going on? Dude, actually, I don't
know what's going on. - [Narrator] After realizing
this wasn't a glitch and that he really had been caught, he guiltily shut off his stream. You see, Vanguard bans,
the user's hardware ID, which makes it impossible
for them to log back in unless they purchase a new PC to play on. He was quickly banned by Twitch as well and hasn't shown his face online since. Well, I think the lesson here is, if you're stupid enough to cheat, be smart enough not to get caught. RYUT. "Valorant's" Vanguard system may be good, but it isn't perfect, as they disappointingly found out during their official
TGS Signature Series. The tournament had a
grand prize of $2,000, attracting the best of the best
teams from around the world. However, during a quarter finals match, Team Tokyo player RYUT stunned
the audience with his skills, and not in a good way. - [Announcer] RYUT's gonna
get pushed back a little bit. Piece by piece, they'll work this. - [Announcer] RYUT taking out Good Steve. We spoke about Good Steve's
performance and, okay, he traded back in kind for RYUT as well. - [Narrator] Did you see that? (video screeches) Okay, this footage is
from tournament mode, so RYUT shouldn't have been able to see the figures in red here, but his crosshairs instantly locked in on an enemy behind the wall, completely ignoring the
visible enemy in front of him. And the proof is in the bullet holes. That's an aim bot hack
if there ever was one. The clip quickly went viral
within the "Valorant" community and RYUT's account was rightfully banned. Sayonara, cheater. Nick Eh 30. Being caught cheating for
a cash prize may be bad, but being caught cheating
in a charity match is worse. During the 2020 Twitch Rivals
"Fortnite" Streamer Bowl, popular streamer Nick Eh 30 was paired with NFL player David Morgan as part of the "Fortnite" tournament. The victor would win part
of the $500,000 prize pool for charities of their choice. To make it fair the rules specified where on the "Fortnite's"
map the players could land. If the players landed outside this zone, they'd get a warning. Repeated warnings would
cost players points and eventually get them
removed from the tournament. Pretty straightforward, except Nick had a
different strategy in mind. - [Announcer] Exactly
what he did last time. - So I think what we want to do, 'cause, remember, we get a warning. We don't get, we just go back in. - [Announcer] As does Nate Hill. - It's not a bad thing
at this point. (laughs) - [Narrator] Sorry to say, Nick, but being caught chatting
about trying to cheat on a charity stream is
definitely a bad thing. The pair ultimately ended up landing outside the allowed zone, annoying a lot of the
other players taking part. Even though they technically cheated, they ended up placing sixth and won $30,000 for their charity. Okay, so it's not the
worst cheat in history. If anything, it was
cheating for a good cause, but Nick's actions really
split the "Fortnite" community, as he walked away without punishment. So what do you think? Did Nick deserve to be reprimanded or was cheating for charity
an okay thing to do? Let me know down in the comments. CPTBALDY. Some of the cheaters in these
online games are so dumb they can be baited into
revealing their hacks in the most obvious ways. Case in point is our next
Twitch streamer caught cheating, CPTBALDY. A fan of claiming a high score
in "Call of Duty: Warzone", this guy got a little too cocky and began hitting enemy
players through the walls. His chat wasn't happy, and so they demanded to see
his task manager to prove he wasn't running any elicit
programs in the background. He acted like nothing was wrong and happily hit
control+alt+delete to bring it up, but he forgot where all his windows were and something else came up on
his stream capture instead. - [Soldier] Enemy UAB on the head. - [Gamer] Nah, control+alt+delete. - Control+alt+delete. - [Gamer] Do you have on a window? - [Gamer] Nah, control+alt+delete task- - [Narrator] If you watched
part one of this series, you might recognize that all too familiar EngineOwning pop-up. EngineOwning are a company
that make cheap cheats for games like "Warzone", including, as CPTBALDY
just showed the world, the old aim at enemies aim bot function, and would you look at that? He has it set to on. To his credit, he quickly
realized his mistake, but the viewers in his
chat were even quicker. - [Gamer] Oh my god, it's
over, it's over. (laughs) - [Narrator] They crucified CPTBALDY, and he was temporarily
banned from "Warzone", as well as Twitch soon after. Twitch eventually reinstated his account, but since then, all his streaming efforts have been inundated by
people calling him a cheater. Well, they're not wrong. Annie Rog. You might be thinking that
it's just PC or console games that people can cheat on,
but thanks to Rog Stream, we know they can cheat
on mobile games as well. Rog Stream is run by
Indian YouTuber Aparna, also known as Annie. She's attracted more than
360,000 subscribers on YouTube and 2.2 million on Facebook by playing "Player
Unknown's Battlegrounds", or "PUBG" Mobile. Now, for the most part, she plays it through the games
official emulator on her PC, which makes sense, considering
she's also streaming. However, at the beginning
of one of her matches back in 2019, something odd
flashed up on her stream. (gamers speaking foreign language) Hmm. Now, I don't play "PUBG", but I'm pretty sure that big yellow lines showing the enemy's
location, name, and stats shouldn't show up for you. Annie didn't think so, either, as you can tell by her look of pure panic. It was pretty clear she was
using some sort of wall hack or ESP hack, so she
quickly exited the match and tried to explain that
she didn't know what it was. But the gaming community
didn't believe a word she said. She later uploaded in apology video, admitting she had been using hacks, begging her followers for forgiveness, and promising to do better. Looks like the only thing
she played here was herself. FranKoR6. The only thing better
than seeing a cheater exposed live on stream is
watching someone bait them into exposing themselves. And for our viewing pleasure, mastermind GMZ managed this back in 2020. He was playing "Rainbow Six Siege" when he noticed one player
was a little too good at predicting other players' positions. GMZ accused him of cheating, but the brazen hacker invited GMZ to take a look at his
stream to prove he wasn't, so GMC asked for his stream name and told him to put his
Streamlabs on display. This way, he'd be able to see
if he'd been hiding his hacks from his game capture. Sure enough streamer
FranKoR6 revealed himself and did as GMZ asked, but the moron didn't
realize that, by doing so, his wall hacks were
visible to the whole world. - You're cheating. (gamer speaking in foreign language) - [Gamer] Rushing, rushing, rushing, guys. - [Narrator] For those who've
never played "Rainbow Six", I can tell you now, those green boxes indicating your opponent's
location aren't normal. Embarrassingly exposed, the team started laughing
at him in their chat, and only then did FranKoR6
realize what he'd done. - (gasps) What? - [Gamer] There you go, that's him. - What? - [Narrator] Oh, that's
the sound of someone who knows they've messed up. Since then, he's done
what any exposed cheater with a shred of common sense would do and has rid Twitch of his presence. Nice job, GMZ. Doing God's work there. ElmZero. Casual gamers caught
cheating is one thing, but professional gamers who cheat are a whole new level of low. That's something Zenith
E-Sports found out back in 2019, when they were recruiting for a new "Apex Legends" team member. To test out some of their new talent, they'd organized a friendly scrim match against another pro group, but in the middle of the match, a different pro player called Rogue, who just happened to be watching
a member of Zenith's team, flagged up some seriously
suspicious behavior. - (duck quacks) I'm exposed. You're separated from me. (gunfire blasts) - [Narrator] Yeah, let's run that back. Did you see him shoot the wall there before tracking and shooting the guy the second he appeared up top? There was literally no
way for him to have known that guy was there unless
he was using a wall hack. The cheater in question was ElmZero, a player Zenith were in
the process of recruiting. More footage was then released, showing Elm warming up with an unnaturally
tight tracking pattern. It was obvious he was using some sort of third party tracking hacks. Embarrassed beyond belief, Zenith immediately dropped
ElmZero from the trial pool. Well, at least ElmZero
made a name for himself, even if it wasn't the good kind. Lee SDA. Speed running is a type of gameplay where players complete games
in the fastest time possible, a bit like racing events for mega nerds. It takes hundreds of hours of practice and super precise button pushes, with mere seconds separating
official top positions. As nerdy as it sounds, speed running is serious business with an incredibly smart community, one that Lee SDA thought he
could outwit back in 2014. He was streaming his speed run of "Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island" with experienced speed runners like Trihex and Carl Sagan watching, and they were impressed. - One chance. YOLO.
- Oh my god, he got it. - [Narrator] But something was off. Lee shouldn't have been able
to make jumps like this, which the community
picked up on immediately. They believed Lee was recording
tool assisted or hacked runs and was them playing them back while pretending to play
them live on stream. Lee idiotically tried to
prove he wasn't cheating by streaming another run, but this time with the
camera aimed at his hands, so that his viewers could
see that he was making all the corresponding button pushes. Big mistake. He couldn't keep up with the assisted run and his viewers broke his
play down frame by frame to reveal Yoshi moved without
Lee hitting the right buttons. With all the evidence
piled up against him, Lee eventually apologized, had all his records removed
from the official rankings, and hasn't streamed another game since. Game over. Getting what they deserve. If you play "Call of Duty: Warzone", it won't surprise you that
more than 500,000 cheaters have been banned since its launch in 2020. These guys ruin almost every match, and most of them don't even bother to hide the fact they're cheating. However, back in 2020, prominent Twitch streamer Northernlion, who has more than 450,000 followers, managed to make a spectacle
out of one of them. He and his team had all been
taken out by a single player, who seemed impossible to beat. Suspicious, Northernlion
and a bunch of other players began spectating the guy's game stream, and what they saw was so shameless, they couldn't help but laugh. - [Gamer] He does need ammo. (gamers laugh)
Oh, my god. - [Narrator] That was like 18
headshots in three seconds. It seems legit, but it
was about to get funnier, because karma was right around the corner. - Oh! - [Gamer] Yes! You (duck quacks) loser! - [Narrator] As the
gaming community knows, the only thing worse than cheating is cheating and still losing. Schadenfreude. Putting a cheater on blast is fun, but streamer CouRage revealed
that getting them banned live in game is pure serotonin. The YouTuber with 3.4 million subscribers was playing "Call of Duty:
Warzone" with his team, when he noticed someone
was playing with hacks that had the power to
shoot him through the door. - I'm out of plates again. Oh my god. - [Narrator] Not cool. After the hacker, called Mini Ninja, wiped out most of his team, they started spectating his
gameplay and called him out. Mini Ninja then revealed
he could hear them and twisted the knife by
taunting them even further. - [Gamer] Yo, Mini, can you hear me? Nod up and down if you can hear me, bro. - Oh, people just load into this game. Oh. - [Gamer] What's it like? - Oh, look there he is. He's nodding up and down. - [Narrator] CouRage was annoyed, but instead of rage quitting,
he decided to get even. He figured out what Mini Ninja's
unique player ID number was and realize the game mods
could ban the guy live with the information. He reached out to them,
kept his fingers crossed, and then, with just a few
players left in the game, this happened. - Banned! Yes, yes! Oh my god! Oh my god!
- Oh my god. - Wait.
- They actually did it. They're all getting banned! Oh my god! Whoo, we did it! - [Narrator] Justice
was served hot that day. Now, we may never know
who Mini Ninja really was, but that's still gotta be one of the most satisfying
"Warzone" moments in history. Dream. Now, this is the big one, or at least it will be to
the Minecraft community. This multi-platform sandbox adventure is the best selling video game in history, with millions of avid fans, and some take it one step
further via speed running. In the random seed category, players try to complete the game in the fastest time possible using completely randomly generated items. Needless to say, it relies on
a tremendous amount of luck, at least that's what dream
wanted people to think. This YouTuber rose to fame in 2020, thanks to his super fast
Minecraft speed runs, which have gained him more
than 26 million subscribers. In 2020, he submitted
a random seed speed run that would have seen him take fifth place on the official leaderboard, but the verification team
surprisingly rejected it. Confused, Dream fought the decision, but then they issued a
whopping 29-page-long document running the maths behind Dream's
supposedly randomized run. In short, the run simply wasn't possible without some kind of cheat enabled. How impossible? Well, to get to the end of the game, players typically need two key items, Ender pearls and blaze rods. The quickest way to get the first one is to barter with Piglins, though there's only around a 5% chance they'll randomly drop an Ender pearl, but in his run, Dream was shown successfully
bartering for these 42 out of 262 times. That's 16%, and his luck didn't end there. Blaze rods are randomly
dropped by defeated blazes around 50% of the time. Dream got 211 rods from
305 defeated blazes. That's 69%. Nice. Now, being lucky isn't proof of cheating, but statistically speaking, Dream had a one in 177 billion chance of getting the trades he did, and a one in 113 billion
chance of the rod drops. Being that impossibly lucky
once is a little suspicious, but twice, no way. So the mods claimed Dream was running something
malicious in the background that improved his odds, even
though they couldn't prove it. At first, Dream denied this furiously. He made all his files public
for people to look at, and he even hired an astrophysicist
to go over the numbers. But after months of combing
through his settings, he finally realized what had happened. He'd cheated, accidentally. He'd installed a series of
mods to help him stream, but a complication with a Minecraft update meant they'd impacted at
least six of his speed runs. He then posted a lengthy
quasi-apology on Pastebin, where he stated he didn't have
any intention of cheating, but intentional or not,
the damage was done. Some of his most loyal
fans defended his actions, whereas many others turned on him and accused him of doing it for clout. But, to his credit, Dream claimed he didn't
make a dime off the drama. The streamed Twitch run didn't
have any donations turned on. It wasn't monetized and wasn't even uploaded
to his YouTube channel. Ultimately, he apologized, praised the speed running mod team for doing such a diligent
job, and moved on. Now, that's not a bad run, if you ask me. If you want to see more streamers
and gamers held to rights, be sure to check out
part one of the series, and if you know of any
others caught in the act, let me know down in the comments below. And, as always, thanks for watching. (cheerful music)