Team Fortress 2 fans protest bots, and Valve responds
Team Fortress 2‘s Twitter account had been dark for nearly two years, but Valve broke that silence on Thursday afternoon, promising to look into hacking and cheating issues angering the 15-year-old game’s still-devoted fanbase.
This was done earlier in the week Team Fortress 2 fans took to Reddit and Twitter to start a “Save TF2” campaign, after years of fighting against bots with no action from Valve. “Not the fun kind [of bots] from Mann VS Machine,” wrote Reddit user diamondDNF. “Aimbots that insta-kill players, spam slurs and copyrighted music in chat, and vote kick all the human players once a lobby has more bots than humans.”
This botting issue — which some redditors blame on a source code leak in 2020 — has understandably ruined the game for most players. On May 26, many creators of content and the community organized a peaceful protest called #SaveTF2. The hashtag trended on TwitterAs fans shared their memories and jokes about the game, they also posted comics.
One fan even dressed up as a TF2 Spy and brought a sign to Valve’s offices — they were promptly removed, according to their Reddit post, likely due to the ski mask that plays a key role in their cosplay.
We hear from the TF2 community! This game is a passion of ours and we know that you love it as well. We are aware of the extent of this problem, and have begun to address it.
— Team Fortress 2 (@TeamFortress) May 26, 2022
Valve’s lone tweet is vague, but at least it responds directly to the peaceful protesters who spent this week trying to make a difference in their favorite game. It’s unclear how or when Valve will fix this issue, but for now fans are happy simply that the studio responded to their movement, and that Team Fortress 2It might soon be possible to play again.
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