Cheating has become so rampant in PUBG that ཧone computer manufacturer is advertising their wares by bragging about how many cheat programs it can run while playing.
It’s almost a cliche at this point. Playing PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds is less🎶 a matter of trying to avoid the games with cheaters in them and more a matter of just trying to avoid the cheaters in each game. That’s easier said than done of course, and especially when said ch🍬eaters can see through walls.
And nearly all cheaters in PUBG are coming from one place: China. The refrain of “Re🔯gion Lock China” has been the standard response on every PUBG Steam update for months. The developers know where the problem comes from and how prevalent it ꦍis, but 💫seem unwilling or unable to take concrete steps to stop it.
The popularity of PUBG, as well as the prevalence of cheaters, has led one PC manufacturer to deve🧔lop an interesting marketing strategy. And Intel’s unveiling of their 8th-gen processors in Beijing last week, by the presentat🌠ion provided by Dell who we🌜re introducing their new G series of gaming laptops.
As Sally Xiao, Vice President for consumer and small business marketing at Dell, presented the new laptops she mentioned that the 8﷽th-gen Intel processors allowed the laptops to "run more plugins to win more at Chicken Dinner.” Plug-in, for the uninitiated, is a code word for cheating software.
RELATED: 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:PUBG WILL LET YOU SPECTATE YOUR KILLER
Japanese gamer site even snapped images of the presentation where Dell showed real-life hacks being used on their laptཧops to win games of PUBG.
Dell eventually responded to the contr𓆉oversy with the following statement:
"Dell is fully committed to supporting fair play in online g൩aming. We do not encourage nor endorse any behavior that undermines fair gaming practices. Dell has a strong track record in partnering with gaming teams, aiming at providing world-class gamers with the ultimate experience. In an attempt to communicate the power of the new Dell G Series, inappropriate modification examples were used in Dell’s product launch event in China last week. This does not reflect our global gaming culture or strategy. We condemn any modifications misused in gaming."
They may condemn the use of “modifications” in games, but that doesn’t seem to ha🐷ve stopped their marketers from sel🌸ling laptops based on how well they can cheat.
NEXT: PUBG PLAYERS DEMAND CHINESE HACKERS GET REGION LOCKED