Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare And Warzone June 13 Patch–Here's What It Contains

Call of Duty: Modern Warfare and the standalone Call of Duty: Warzone have received a new patch on all platforms, and it’s bringing a few minor changes and improvements to the game. This isn’t like the enormous Season 4 pass, so expect a much smaller download–and because it’s a server-side patch, it’ll download and install right away when you load the game up.

According to a tweet from developer Infinity Ward, the patch that went live on June 13 fixes a few small issues. Players will no longer spawn outside the map in Scrapyard, and in-match events were not occurring at the right frequency in Warzone, which has also been fixed.

Some players who had purchased the Battle Pass were finding themselves unable to use the content they were unlocking. This has also now been addressed, so players will find themselves able to unlock things as expected. That’s it for this update, so if you’re holding out for Shoot House to return, you’ll have to keep hoping.

Warzone and Modern Warfare recently kicked off Season 4, which introduced a new Operator, Captain Price. It also looks like the Battle Royale game will be adding a set of 200-player modes in the future.

GameSpot has officially kicked off Play For All–a celebration of all things gaming. Join us as we bring you the summer’s hottest news, previews, interviews, features, and videos, as well as raise money for COVID-19 relief efforts and Black Lives Matter with the help of our friends from around the gaming world. Check out the Play For All schedule for more.

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Call of Duty: Modern Warfare Lets You Delete Bits To Save Storage Space

It’s no secret that Call of Duty: Modern Warfare is a pretty storage-intensive title. However, Activision has recently confirmed that you can delete portions of the game that you’re not using in order to save space.

A few days ago, the official Activision support Twitter account posted about players being able to remove unused Modern Warfare content if they choose to. It looks like downloading the game includes a number of separate installs that can be safely removed without affecting your gameplay experience so long as you only remove content that you’re not wanting to use.

According to a post on the Call of Duty: Modern Warfare support forums, the separate gaming installs that you can opt-out of and uninstall to save space are as follows:

  • Data Pack 1 (required to access Campaign, Multiplayer, and Special Ops)
  • Campaign Pack 1 (Xbox One only) (required to play Campaign)
  • Campaign Pack 2 (Xbox One only) (required to play Campaign)
  • Multiplayer Pack (Xbox One only) (required to play Multiplayer)
  • Multiplayer Pack 2 (required to play Multiplayer)
  • Special Ops Pack (required to play Special Ops)
  • Special Ops Pack 2 (required to play Special Ops)
  • Survival Pack (PlayStation 4 only) (required to play Special Ops Survival)

To access the ability to uninstall any of the above packs, players have to navigate to the Game Installs menu on their installation. Regardless of which console you own Call of Duty: Modern Warfare on, this is accessed via the Options menu, then the General tab. Players can then pick and choose the data that they want to keep i.e. a player who isn’t big on Multiplayer may choose to uninstall the Multiplayer content in order to save space.

In other recent Call of Duty: Modern Warfare news, a small patch has just gone live which fixes a bug where players were spawning outside the map in Scrapyard, and tweaks the frequency of some Warzone in-match events.

GameSpot has officially kicked off Play For All–a celebration of all things gaming. Join us as we bring you the summer’s hottest news, previews, interviews, features, and videos, as well as raise money for COVID-19 relief efforts and Black Lives Matter with the help of our friends from around the gaming world. Check out the Play For All schedule for more.

Kompletter Artikel: Call of Duty: Modern Warfare Lets You Delete Bits To Save Storage Space

Modern Warfare & Warzone: Trailer zur Season 4 – das erwartet Spieler

Infinity Ward veröffentlicht den Trailer zur Season 4 in Call of Duty: Modern Warfare und Warzone. Auf Spieler warten jede Menge neuer Inhalte, darunter die Rückkehr des Kartenklassikers Scrapyard. In Warzone wiederum steht beispielsweise ein neuer…

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RAINBOW SIX SIEGE STATUS REPORT

Table of Contents:

1. Sound Issues
2. Connectivity
— 2.1. Overall Connectivity
— 2.2. Latency Policy
3. Cheating and Disruptive Behavior
— 3.1. DDoS
— 3.2. Boosting
— 3.3. Smurfing
— 3.4. Incomplete Teams
— 3.5. Vote to Kick Abuse
— 3.6. MMR Rollback Frustrations
— 3.7. Streamer Mode
4. Accessibility
5. Smoke Propagation Issues
6. Drone Issues

With a game that has been around for as long as Siege, we are aware that there are long-standing issues that we have yet to fully resolve. We are dedicated to maintaining and growing the game continually, as we have done for many years before. We appreciate the community’s support throughout the years, and we also thank you for your patience as the game continues to develop.

In this Status Report we will be shedding some light on long-standing topics of player concerns that are very important to us, but also complex to discuss. Our regular Top Issues and Community Concerns blog posts lays out current issues with more finite and short-term fixes. The goal of this Status Report is to share behind-the-scenes insight as to why some of the long-standing issues are so persistent, and how we are approaching solutions to them in the long-run.

While not all of these topics will be addressed in the near future, we do have several things already in the works that we want to share.

1. SOUND ISSUES

Concerns: We are aware that various sound issues in the game have been problematic for players for some time. Sound in Siege is a very complex system which attempts to realistically simulate sound propagation in a 3D environment. In some cases, the complexity of the sound system can be confusing which leads to player misunderstandings—for example, when sound uses a specific route to reach the player, but the player is not aware of that route (like in the case of a Maverick hole). In other cases, this complexity can also mean it can be very difficult to diagnose sound bugs, such as the frequently mentioned inversed audio, or missing sounds.

Challenges: Our sound system takes into account many parameters when serving sounds to players. This includes the player’s position, environment, game state, and more. New components that interact with our sound system get added every Season, and with new elements there are always new opportunities for bugs to be introduced.

Another important factor to consider is that Siege’s destruction engine fosters a constantly changing, dynamic environment. Every round is unique since sound propagation dynamically changes based on the different states of destruction. This adds an extra layer of complexity to reproducing and fixing sound-related issues.

The goal of sound propagation in Siege is to dynamically convey realistic sound direction and position to the players. This is done by dividing our maps into multiple spaces, which allow sound to propagate from one space to another through specific connection points (such as destructible walls, floors, doors and windows). Then depending on the current state of map destruction, the propagation system connects the sound to the listener by calculating the best path. It will check whether the connector points are covered by their corresponding wall, or if a hole was made which would let the sound pass. Once the algorithm determines the optimum pathway, we use this information to position and modulate the sound so players can recognize the sound’s origin and distance.

Future: To get sound in Siege to a better place we have taken multiple actions internally to help us diagnose and fix sound issues. First, we have instrumented the sound system to help us catch errors more quickly. This aims to enable us to identify errors earlier in our development process, as well as debug difficult-to-reproduce problems.

Secondly, we have reviewed the status of our sound and propagation systems. We’ve reached the conclusion that we need to rebuild large parts of it, starting with the way sounds are packaged and connected to the game. We are aiming to begin releasing the sound repackaging in Season 3. However, the full rebuild of the entire sound propagation and sound interactions systems is a major undertaking that will not be finalized in Year 5.

In the meantime, new bugs that pop up are fixed when proper reproduction can be achieved by our QC teams. This is one of the main roadblocks behind the inverse audio and missing sounds bugs: they seem to occur randomly and cannot be recreated consistently in-house, which makes it very difficult to work on the steps towards a solution. However, we will continue to try reproducing sound bugs as part of our usual processes and fixing them whenever possible. We would also like to ask for the community’s help on this matter. If you find a consistent way of reproducing any sound issues you face, please let us know through R6 Fix, opt in for direct contact in your submission, and we can reach out for more info.

2. CONNECTIVITY

Connectivity is a varied topic that encompasses many different areas such as internet service providers, our backend services (such as matchmaking), our game servers, our game server provider, and even DDoS attacks.

2.1 OVERALL CONNECTIVITY

Challenges: Our live and online teams monitor our online services 24/7 to ensure that the game is always available to our players. They are always aware of any degradations that arise and work very hard to resolve them as quickly as possible. Despite their constant surveillance, degradations do still occur. While some degradations can occur due to changes on our end, other times degradations are outside of our control (i.e. third-party degradations). When a degradation occurs, we do our utmost to bring services back online with minimum impact to our players. For prolonged periods of downtime we have a compensation matrix in place.

As an example, at the beginning of the stay-at-home measures in mid-March, the added load on our servers caused degradations in matchmaking and login problems. To answer the increased load and player activity, we scaled up our infrastructure by:

  • Doubling the number of servers allocated to processing matchmaking data (distributing the load across more servers to prevent backlogs).
  • Adding additional shards (each shard is a separate server instance) to increase the capacity of our databases (increasing database scalability and performance).
  • Doubling the capacity of the Rainbow Six Siege load balancer (increasing capacity to be able to distribute network traffic more reliably).
  • From start to end, the connectivity issues lasted less than a week while we implemented the above measures before returning to normal.

During regular periods of activity, our data indicates that 97% of Ranked games start with 10 players, and more than 98.5% of matches end successfully without individual connection lost, high ping kicks, or game server crashes. The graph below illustrates the overall success rate of Rainbow Six matches since the beginning of the year (in green):

However, a good example of connectivity issues that are not within our control can be seen in the blue section of the graph. The blue section above indicates matches where at least one player was kicked due to high ping. With the start of stay-at-home measures in March, the percentage of high ping kicks has more than doubled due to the additional load placed on the internet globally — a factor we are unable to control.

Future: Our live and online teams are constantly exploring ways to improve the quality of service in Siege. They have been working endlessly behind the scenes since the launch of Siege and continue their efforts to this day.

To improve connectivity performance and resiliency, we migrated our game servers to Linux last year, and this year, work is already underway to improve resiliency in case of third-party outages. To improve horizontal scaling capabilities, improve matchmaking times, and allow for more seamless maintenances, we are working on transitioning our entire backend to a microservices based architecture. As you can imagine, these changes take time. However, we will make our best efforts to make everything seamless and transparent to players, so look forward to more updates from us as these changes go live.

2.2 LATENCY POLICY

Concern: When a player’s ping reaches a certain threshold for a sustained period of time, they are kicked from the game. The current kick threshold is considered too lenient by some in the community.

Challenge: Our current ping thresholds are based on values observed during the 2015 Alpha tests. Connectivity kicks and warning standards for what we deem to be so laggy as to have a negative impact on the game is based on that data. Anything less than a ping of 110ms is considered acceptable and for any values over this, additional checks and verifications are applied to the player’s actions before triggering a kick to remove the player. Future: We need to maintain an overall quality of play performance for everyone in the game, while allowing some flexibility for potential fluctuations in the normal course of gameplay. Our teams are invested in reducing latency by adding game servers in additional regions—but this will require proper assessments on whether the population in that region would be able to sustain matchmaking while still putting players into matches within a reasonable amount of time. It will also depend on the capacity of our infrastructure providers. (Siege currently maintains servers in West EU, North EU, South Africa, HK, Singapore, Japan, Australia, US West, US East, US Central South and Brazil). As we add more regions and the average player latency is reduced, we may re-evaluate our data and revisit potential changes to ping thresholds.

3. CHEATERS AND DISRUPTIVE BEHAVIOR

Cheating in Siege is and will always be a topic of high priority for us. In our latest issue of Top Issues and Community Concerns we outlined the results of some of our short-term tactics to mitigate hackers, cheating, and lobby freezes. We will continue to communicate on anti-cheat measures under the condition that it will not compromise our efforts against cheaters and won’t negatively impact implemented solutions. We do also aim to have a longer-form dev blog on cheating in the near future.

On the subject of toxicity, we take a firm stance against it. We seek to prioritize healthy interactions between players, promote a positive game environment, and uplift a supportive community. Presently, we try to mitigate toxic and disruptive behaviors in game with chat filtering, mute options, Reverse Friendly Fire, keeping all-chat off by default, and the upcoming Match Cancellation feature. The battle against toxicity must ultimately be a collaborative effort between the team and the Siege community, so we will continue to encourage positive behaviors we’d like to see more of.

Concern: DDoS issues have arisen from time to time as cheaters find different methods to attack vulnerabilities in our systems.

Challenges: We are highly committed to protecting our game from DDoS attacks. We have a dedicated team monitoring network anomalies and DDoS attacks on our servers. However, each case differs and often requires different partners (both internal and external) to investigate and remedy. For instance, a recent rise in reports of DDoS was actually tied to lobby freezing—a different method of disrupting the game. We worked to create a refined detection and tracking method for lobby freezers and then implemented an automatic kick for identified cheaters.

To provide some context, below is a graph that represents the number of successful DDoS attacks on our systems.

In the months leading up to Ember Rise, the number of DDoS attacks rose incredibly quickly. We began implementing a number of measures to put a stop to the attacks, including working closely with external providers. Once our DDoS mitigation solution was activated, we saw the number of successful attacks drop to almost 0.

The situation remained stable until recently, when a rise in DDoS reports in the beginning of March led to our discovery of some new DDoS techniques being used.

Future: We will continue to monitor and investigate DDoS attacks on our servers. Our dedicated DDoS team is currently pursuing several avenues to mitigate new types of attacks we’ve discovered in collaboration with our external cloud provider. We will provide more regular updates on this in our Top Issues and Community Concerns blog posts, or in upcoming patch notes depending on when we have more to share.

3.2. BOOSTING

Concern: Boosters unfairly inflate the rank of other players via dishonest or illegal means. This is usually done by manipulating our matchmaking systems by smurfing and/or through cheats.

Future: To handle accounts boosted by cheaters, we have a 2-step system that includes banning the cheaters, and then carrying out a MMR rollback. Banned cheaters will trigger MMR rollbacks, and we can identify with quite high confidence players who receive a significant MMR as having been boosted. These boosted players then receive an MMR reset and are required to redo their Season’s placement matches. Furthermore, to reduce boosting, we also implemented a limit on the maximum MMR gap allowed between party members. Another step to combat boosting is the upcoming unified MMR change. This allows our matchmaking system to properly identify players based on their worldwide MMR rather than their regional one should they change servers (therefore allowing them to play at their Seasonal MMR reset’s value for a short period).

Unfair matchmaking caused by players who are misrepresenting their actual skill level is an issue we will continuously strive to improve on.

3.3. SMURFING

Concern: Smurfs create imbalances in matchmaking when they use new accounts to hide their actual skill level. Our matchmaking system does not use Clearance Level, K/D, or win rate to carry out matchmaking. It uses MMR. MMR is determined by your match’s outcome, while taking into account the enemy team’s MMR. By disguising their true skill level, smurfs impact the competitive balance of the match with very few ways for us to verify the incident.

Challenges: Smurfing is a struggle the entire industry faces and in our community, it damages the playing experience.

Our User Research team will continue to work to improve our understanding and analysis of this topic in the future, however a major difficulty lies in the limited tracking. Smurfs are difficult to identify, and we need a way to do so before making any changes to our system to combat these players. Currently, our team is using the available data to detect outliers that would indicate smurfing. In the meanwhile, we will continue to enforce measures such as 2-Step Verification to add barriers to multiple accounts creation.

3.4. INCOMPLETE TEAMS

Challenge: Games that begin with an unequal number of players are extremely frustrating, and this kind of disadvantage goes against our goal of fair, balanced, and enjoyable games. While the Ranked playlist does allow players to rejoin the games they were in, we do realize that rejoining does not always occur.

Future: In Year 5 Season 2, we have announced the introduction of a new Match Cancellation feature. This will not ship at Season launch but later on during the Season.

To create the new Match Cancellation feature, we had to ensure that the system would not be exploitable and easily abused by players who wanted to bail on a game after loading in. Many situations and parameters had to be evaluated to set up criteria under which disadvantaged teams would be able to justify cancelling a match—such as momentary disconnects needing a chance to rejoin and how the voting system would work. Match Cancellation will give the disadvantage team the agency of cancelling the match when all our criteria for a potential cancellation is met. We are excited to share this with you in our next Season.

3.5. VOTE TO KICK ABUSE

Concern: While Vote to Kick is no longer an option in Ranked Games, we often see Quick Match players reporting frustrations over the abuse of this function. The intention of this feature is to provide players with an option to remove a teammate should they exhibit problematic behavior; however, the original intent has sometimes been manipulated by some to create toxicity.

Challenges: We are aware of how this function has been abused and we agree that a redesign of the Vote to Kick rules is in order. There are multiple ways this feature has been abused and we are currently assessing the data to understand the various scenarios and how we can block openings for abuse. We have identified a few starting points, such as preventing players under certain sanctions from voting, and we are currently going over the Vote to Kick designs with the goal of having an upgrade live by Season 4.

3.6. MMR ROLLBACK FRUSTRATIONS

Concern: We often hear feedback from players regarding MMR rollback frustrations when players who manage to win against cheaters still have their games rolled back.

Challenges: When we first introduced MMR rollbacks, there were concerns of massive MMR drops to the unwilling/unknowing teammates of the cheater if games where cheaters lose are not cancelled. As an unwilling teammate, all the matches you’d won together are rolled back (thus losing MMR), but all the games lost together will not get cancelled either (and therefore, the lost MMR still remains).

This is a non-issue if teammates are players who knowingly were in a squad with a cheater. However, in many cases where accounts are hacked by cheaters or teammates are just unknowingly playing with a cheater, this can be exceptionally hurtful to a legitimate but unsuspecting player.

Future: With the recently introduced MMR Reset, this partially mitigates some of the potential massive MMR Rollback concerns outlined above. When there is a large enough MMR rollback, players affected will have their MMR reset and be required to re-do their placement matches. We will be exploring what other risks there might be in only rolling back games where cheaters win in the near future.

3.7. STREAMER MODE

Concern: We want to provide streamers with a layer of anonymity to maintain their gaming experience against major frustrations such as stream sniping.

Challenges: We are exploring a few options and need to find a solution where we would still be able to internally identify players while Streamer Mode is on—while providing public-facing anonymity.

Future: We have an early iteration of a potential solution which we discussed with a select few streamers. While the initial reception was positive, we need to make sure the feature is as bulletproof as possible security-wise to ensure there are no workarounds to affect anonymity while still allowing us to trace our players and player data when a different identity is used. We are continuing to iterate on the design and validating to see if we can break down this feature into more intermediate deliverables. We are committed to providing tools where content creators can communicate with their community and express their passion safely. At the same time, we will continue to take feedback to ensure that our system is robust and aligned with our players’ expectations.

4. ACCESSIBILITY

Challenges: Player accessibility is important to us and the continued growth of Siege. Our vision for greater accessibility involves a full-fledged colorblind solution as a system that allows players the option to re-color claymores, laser sights, camera lights, etc.—while also taking into account which team you’re on for proper feedback.

Our earlier initiatives for implementing colorblind solutions did not live up to our expectations when tested with colorblind players. We learned that filters alone were not sufficient answers to most of the issues, and in some cases, it even created additional problems. We needed to implement a proper solution offering full-spectrum color selection. Customization at this level entails separating multiple elements for dynamic re-coloring—a significant task we have decided to split into smaller parts.

We are revisiting colorblindness in the near future. We will begin by focusing on improving the shooting experience first through taking a look at reticle colors and what can be done there. We hope to have something to share soon.

This is the first step in putting in place a flexible and comprehensive system. Many of our accessibility team’s resources are currently focused on adding what’s outlined in the Communications and Video Accessibility Act to the game. This will come with other accessibility improvements not specifically targeting colorblindness.

5. SMOKE PROPAGATION ISSUES

Concern: Smoke propagation as it currently stands is unreliable and confusing. The core of the problem is that small interior environments do not work well with our current smoke propagation system to allow for realistic gas positioning. As a result, we often see smoke clipping issues which, in the case of Smoke’s gadget also causes damage.

Challenge: We have previously explored solutions for smoke propagation by expanding on Capitão’s reworked smoke system. However, that system was not built to handle large layers of very dense gas like that of smoke grenades or Smoke’s gadget. Using Capitão’s smoke system on these kinds of smokes would cause massive drops in performance, negatively affecting gameplay and player experience.

Future: We have tried a few smaller fixes and workarounds on the system, but the results were unsatisfactory. We have concluded that we will need to overhaul the smoke propagation system, which will involve sizable work on the graphics and engine side to ensure good visual quality while maintaining a solid framerate. This is currently on hold until we have the time and resources to address it. We will communicate further when we have more to share.

6. DRONE ISSUES

Concern: Various drone-related bugs will pop up from time to time. These are varied, but frustrating as droning and gathering intel is a big part of the game.

Challenge: As the game grows, the drone system has become overly complex with many different moving parts. Sometimes, when making new changes to drones, we may unintentionally affect other parts of the system. Future: We will continue to investigate drone bugs as they arise and will work to fix them as soon as possible.

We are also migrating the drone system to our new gadget v2 system, which is designed to simplify, streamline, and decouple systems. Migration of some gadgets to this system been done transparently in the past year, and we will continue to improve all our gadgets in this way to help them be more resilient to exploits, and iterate faster. Automatic tests have also been added to identify regressions as soon as they occur. In some cases, bugs are caused by complex interactions with the drone system—or the game at large. Those complex cases should be addressed once our migration to the gadget v2 framework is complete.

NEXT UP

If you’ve made it to this paragraph, you’ve made your way through a very long list of long-term goals and promises. But we have good news for the near future too. We have got some community requests that -are- coming soon such as the alpha of the match replay system, map pick-and-ban, and various reworks. Plus, we’ve got even more things on the horizon that we are excited to share such as the reputation system, ping 2.0, and more. We look forward to continuing to build on the game with all of you!

For regular updates on Rainbow Six Siege, continue to look out for our patch notes, dev blogs, designer’s notes, Top Issues and Community Concerns articles, and Seasonal reveal panels. We aim to improve communications on a few key topics such as cheating, connectivity, and matchmaking—we will be releasing dev blogs touching on those in the near future.

Kompletter Artikel: RAINBOW SIX SIEGE STATUS REPORT

Activision Blizzard Pledges Up To $4 Million To Fight Against Systematic Inequality

Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick has announced a $1 million donation to various organizations that provide “transformative opportunities to Black Americans.” The initial amount is going to the United Negro College Fund, the Equal Justice Initiative, and Management Leadership for Tomorrow.

The United Negro College Fund is an organization that funds scholarships for black students and general scholarship funds for 37 historically black universities. The Equal Justice Initiative provides legal representation to prisoners who may have been wrongly convicted. Management Leadership for tomorrow is an organization set on bringing more diversity to business leadership. The company did not specify how much of the initial donation would go to each organization.

The Overwatch and Call of Duty developer and publisher joins a number of other companies in donating to Black Lives Matter and related causes.

Kotick also announced a $1 million personal pledge and a pledge from the company to match employee donations to create an overall goal to raise $4 million for the above organizations.

Activision Blizzard came under fire recently for finding “multiple ways to unnecessarily enrich” Kotick according to company shareholder and CtW Investment Groups’ director Dieter Waizenegger. Activision Blizzard saw $6.49 billion in revenue last year while Kotick made more than $30 million, meaning this donation is a drop in the bucket compared to his annual earnings. He is one of the highest-paid executives not only in video games, but across the entire entertainment media industry.

Activision Blizzard defended Kotick’s compensation saying that “compensation is performance-based.” The company has a shareholder meeting scheduled for later today.

GameSpot has officially kicked off Play For All–a celebration of all things gaming. Join us as we bring you the summer’s hottest news, previews, interviews, features, and videos, as well as raise money for COVID-19 relief efforts and Black Lives Matter with the help of our friends from around the gaming world. Check out the Play For All schedule for more.

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CoD Modern Warfare & Warzone: Roadmap für Season 4 – das sind die kommenden Inhalte

Infinity Ward stellt die Roadmap für die Call of Duty: Modern Warfare und Warzone Season 4 vor. Im Verlauf der Staffel sollen die Ego-Shooter um viele neue Inhalte ergänzt werden. So stehen beispielsweise die beiden neuen Operatoren Gaz und Rose auf dem…

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CoD: Warzone Adds Secret Nuclear Missile To A Bunker In Season 4

Players are finding some interesting things within the bunkers of Call of Duty: Warzone. Following the game’s new Season 4 update on PC, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One, developers Infinity Ward and Raven Software have seemingly added nukes to the battle royale.

The nuke can be found on the official Warzone subreddit, where players discovered it inside Bunker 10. Chatter within the comments section seems to speculate on a number of things, from the return of the much-loved Nuke Town map to the dam exploding and flooding the Warzone location of Verdansk. Some are even suggesting that an announcement of some sort might happen either during or after today’s PS5 reveal.

Here’s Bunker 10’s map location if you want to look for it.

Neither Infinity Ward nor Raven Software has publicly commented on the sudden appearance of this nuclear missile, so it’s unclear if they mean or will do anything. It’s also worth mentioning that this missile in Bunker 10 isn’t the only one, with players uncovering other warheads in Bunker 11. As it stands, Warzone players can only open two of the newly-added bunkers in-game.

This comes just after both Modern Warfare and Warzone received a patch for Season 4, which is pretty massive on all platforms. The update makes a number of changes to both games, like adding new maps and modes, adjusting Challenges and Contracts, and more.

GameSpot has officially kicked off Play For All–a celebration of all things gaming. Join us as we bring you the summer’s hottest news, previews, interviews, features, and videos, as well as raise money for COVID-19 relief efforts and Black Lives Matter with the help of our friends from around the gaming world. Check out the Play For All schedule for more.

Kompletter Artikel: CoD: Warzone Adds Secret Nuclear Missile To A Bunker In Season 4

CoD: Modern Warfare/Warzone Season 4 Battle Pass — Here's What To Expect

Call of Duty: Modern Warfare and Warzone have entered a new chapter today with the release of the much-anticipated Season 4 update. As with every new season, there is another Battle Pass, and now we know what’s in it.

What’s In The Season 4 Battle Pass

The most exciting part of the Battle Pass is its new Operator, the iconic Call of Duty character Captain Price. Everyone who buys the Battle Pass will get Captain Price right away, though you can also work your way through the Battle Pass to unlock him through regular gameplay.

Those who do buy the Battle Pass will not only get Captain Price (and his character missions), but also a special operator skin, a mission for the Rodin, and a new “battle horn” customization item. Additionally, everyone who buys the Battle Pass gets a 10% XP boost for the entire season.

Players who reach the final tier of the Season 4 Battle Pass–Tier 100–will get the “Nightfall” skin, along with a legendary weapon blueprint, a vehicle skin, and other items.

Ride of the Valkyries

The “Ride of the Valkyries” battle horn item is unlocked at Tier 0, so you’ll get it almost right away just by playing. This horn plays that iconic song when you equip it onto a vehicle. This song was famously used in the Vietnam movie Apocalypse Now, and some people may wonder if this is a tease for the rumoured Cold War/Vietnam Call of Duty game said to be releasing this year.

More Vehicle Skins

Season 4’s Battle Pass introduces a series of new skins for vehicles in the Ground War and Warzone modes. There are five new skins in all, including one for each vehicle. They include “Ambush Alley,” which gives your ride a muddy camo look, and “From the Ashes,” which makes your helicopter look like it’s on fire.

Blueprints And More

There are a series of weapon blueprints included in the Modern Warfare/Warzone Season 4 Battle Pass, such as Sunset Hue LMG (Tier 18), Glacial Polish SMG (Tier 42), and the Muckrake sniper (Tier 76). And as with previous Battle Passes, the Season 4 pass includes a series of other extras including new watches, XP tokens, and allotments of Call of Duty Points.

New Operators And Skins

Outside of the Battle Pass, the Call of Duty Store is being updated with new Operators and skins. Sgt. Kyle “Gaz” Garrick will be available to purchase. You may remember him from the Modern Warfare campaign as a member of Task Force 141. The other new Operator is Roze, who is a former Army Ranger who is on the Allegiance side in the Jackals faction.

There are also more Operator skins, including the “Bloodletter” for Nikto. The rest were not announced.

The Season 4 update also adds three more multiplayer maps and some new in-game events for Warzone. For more, check out the Season 4 patch notes.

GameSpot has officially kicked off Play For All–a celebration of all things gaming. Join us as we bring you the summer’s hottest news, previews, interviews, features, and videos, as well as raise money for COVID-19 relief efforts and Black Lives Matter with the help of our friends from around the gaming world. Check out the Play For All schedule for more.

Kompletter Artikel: CoD: Modern Warfare/Warzone Season 4 Battle Pass — Here's What To Expect

Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare's Free Play Weekend Is Now Live

To celebrate the arrival of Season 4 of Call of Duty: Modern Warfare, Activision is hosting a free multiplayer trial this weekend on PS4, Xbox One, and PC. The free trial includes numerous playlists and maps, including the two most recent additions to the 6v6 multiplayer catalog. You can start playing for free right now and continue playing throughout the weekend until June 15 at 10 AM PT / 1 PM ET.

Unlike many free weekend trials we see, Modern Warfare’s is limited to select multiplayer content. Activision has revealed two of the 6v6 multiplayer maps you can check out: Zhokov Scrapyard and Hardhat. Scrapyard was just added with the Season 4 update. The close quarters map originally appeared in Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2. You can also play Hardhat, another small map that takes place in a construction yard and initially debuted in Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3. Those legacy maps will be joined by “a few other fan-favorites,” according to a press release.

Free trial players can also dive into Gunfight, the 2v2 showdown game mode that’s new to Modern Warfare. Gunfight eliminates loadouts by spawning you with a random weapon each round. The first team to take five rounds wins the match. Seven maps specifically designed for the tactically-oriented Gunfight will be in the playlist during the free trial.

To partake in the free weekend, you’ll need to download Call of Duty: Warzone, the free-to-play battle royale, from the PlayStation Store, Xbox Store, or Battle.net. While PS4 players don’t need PlayStation Plus to play Warzone, an active Xbox Live Gold subscription is required to play on Xbox One.

If you want to keep playing after the free weekend, the full Modern Warfare experience is currently on sale for all three platforms. It’s one of the many games discounted during PlayStation’s Days of Play sale and Xbox’s Deals Unlocked sale. The standard edition is on sale for $45, while the Battle Pass edition is down to $64. The Battle Pass edition comes with enough in-game currency to purchase Season 4’s Battle Pass, 20 free unlockable tiers of rewards, a combat knife and skin, and the XRK Weapons Pack.

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