Dota 2 Resets 17K Accounts to Fight Matchmaking Abuse and Cheating

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Valve is mass-banning Dota 2 smurfers who are manipulating matchmaking or selling accounts, as evident by a new 17K player reset.
In any esports community there is going to be a group of cheaters, smurfs, and account resellers that cheapen the experience. In a major loss to those people who play Dota 2, Valve has reset about 17,000 accounts who were abusing matchmaking to get into ranked.

Announced in a Tweet earlier today by the official Dota 2 Twitter account, Valve revealed they helped cut down some of the worst players:



Thankfully, if you aren’t someone who has been abusing the in-game matchmaking system, you likely won’t be getting swept into this reset. And though that point should be a given, it isn’t always the case with every major ban spree. Also, if you are one of the offenders (shame on you), you’ll be happy to know that it is only a reset of these accounts — not a full-on ban.

This couldn’t have come at a better time for the Dota 2 community. The dedicated MOBA community has been complaining about ranked and matchmaking manipulation, going as far as to highlight Twitch streamers that are openly account boosting:



And this is far from a new stance from developer Valve. Roughly two years ago, the developer ushered out another update within Dota 2 to combat matchmaking manipulation — specifically requiring all users to register a unique phone number to their account in order to queue for Ranked matches. According to Valve:

Players using multiple accounts create a negative matchmaking experience at all skill brackets, so our goal is to add just enough friction to this process that the number of players doing this will be noticeably reduced. Having more players using their primary accounts will have a positive effect on both Ranked and Unranked Matchmaking.




Meanwhile, the dedicated community is overjoyed with the move, praising Valve.

Valve has done a great job side-stepping controversy and playing to the community. Earlier this year there were accusations that a Dota 2 Major organizer was threatening controversial players, yet Valve was able to thread the needle in satisfying an angry esports community and insulted Chinese fanbase.

Dota 2 is available now exclusively on PC, if you wanted to jump into hardcore esports title ahead of The International.

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Source: https://www.dualshockers.com/dota-2-ban-steam-pc-smurf/

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MazePosted:

Damn seems like a real problem they are trying to address. 17k seems like only the beginning.