Over 200,000 Team Fortress 2 players sign #FixTF2 petition to end ‘Bot Crisis’

Over 200,000 players have now signed a petition for Valve to address the ‘Bot Crisis’. Additionally, players began reviewing the bombastic Team Fortress 2 on Steam, and the game’s Recent Reviews score dropped to “Mostly Negative”.

What do you need to know

  • Team Fortress 2 (TF2), Valve’s 2007 class shooter that is still very popular today, was plagued by the “Bot Crisis” for five years.
  • Bots equipped with aimbot cheats have been flooding TF2 Casual matchmaking servers for years, instantly killing other players with sniper shots, kicking them out of games, and spamming in-game text and voice chat.
  • The people hosting these bots have even programmed them to leak personal information in some cases, and one TF2 content creator says the culprits have gone so far as to “beat” them with a fake emergency call to the police to get officers to investigate their home.
  • In response to Valve’s radio silence on the issue, players organized the #FixTF2 movement and created a developer petition that has over 150,000 signatures. Below is a link where you can sign it.
  • Update: The petition now has over 200,000 signatures. Additionally, players have started reviewing Team Fortress 2 as a bomb, with the game’s Recent Reviews score on Steam now being “Mostly Negative”.

Original article: Valve’s popular 2007 free-to-play shooter Team Fortress 2 (TF2) is one of the most popular multiplayer games and one of the best PC games ever made, but five whole years now it’s crippled by what fans call the “Bot Crisis” – an endless swarm of fake players equipped with aimbot cheats. These bots often overcome matches in TF2’s Casual matchmaking by popping up as the Sniper class and instantly killing anyone they come across with headshots, while simultaneously using their numbers and Steam’s name change system to resist being kicked by humans players.

Since the beginning of the bot crisis in late 2019, Valve has only commented on the matter once in 2022, promising to “work to improve things” after the #SaveTF2 hashtag trended in the gaming community. The problem then improved greatly for a time, but soon subsided and became as severe as before, if not worse. This is the state the game remains in today, with the culprits now also programming their bots to spam TF2’s in-game text and voice chat, impersonate other players, and even leak personal information from individuals critical of their actions (this video covers more details about this). One TF2 content creator even says that bot hosts have gone so far as to “beat” them or make fake 911 calls to the police to get officers sent to their home.

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