PUBG MOBILE’s Ban Wave: 257k Accounts Gone—What It Means

aimi2000
·
·
IPFS

PUBGMOBILE’s latest ban report is out, and it’s clear the team’s cracking down hard. From July 4 to 10, 257,051 accounts got permanent bans, and 7,304 devices were blocked—no second chances. That’s a big jump from last month’s 190k bans, showing they’re stepping up efforts.

What’s Getting Players Banned?

Most bans are for cheats: aimbots, wallhacks, and speed hacks top the list. But this time, more devices got blocked too—meaning repeat offenders can’t just make new accounts. “Good,” one player tweeted. “Tired of dying to someone who sees through walls.”

The team also took down 1,124 cheat ads last week—posts pushing hacks that had 884k+ views. These ads often pop up on social media, promising “undetectable” tools. Now, you can report them directly via the support link—PUBGMOBILE even rewards top reporters with in-game crates.

How They’re Catching Cheaters

Behind the scenes, their anti-cheat system, “BattlEye,” uses AI to flag suspicious behavior: sudden 180-degree turns, perfect accuracy, or moving through walls. It’s gotten smarter—players say false bans are rare now. “I used to worry about getting banned for lag, but not anymore,” a forum user wrote.

Streamers are noticing a difference too. “Matches feel fairer,” said “PUBG_Live.” “Last week, I actually lost a close fight—no hacks, just skill. That’s how it should be.”

Why This Matters for You

Cleaner lobbies mean more fun, whether you’re a casual player or a tryhard. Less cheating = more trust in the game. Plus, reporting ads helps keep new players from getting sucked into hacks—growing the honest community.

Need UC for new skins? Search Bittopup on Google—70% off, safe and easy.

PUBGMOBILE’s sending a clear message: cheat, and you’re out. With more bans, better detection, and player reports, the game’s getting fairer. So grab your squad, drop in, and enjoy knowing the fight’s about skill—not hacks.

CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 授权

喜欢我的作品吗?别忘了给予支持与赞赏,让我知道在创作的路上有你陪伴,一起延续这份热忱!