Reprehensible Conniving Chinks Responsible for the Overwhelming Majority of Battlegrounds Hacks

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
December 22, 2017

Unsurprisingly, the overwhelming majority of gaming cheats come from the world’s number one cheater race: the sneaking chinks.

The Neo-Nazi video game blogger Nathan Grayson of the White Supremacist game blog site Kotaku has vowed to expose “these dastardly slopes” for their infamous crimes against the gaming industry.

Kotaku blogger Nathan Grayson is seeking to “eliminate chinks” with his “slice the slopes” campaign.

This week he interviewed Battlegrounds creator Brendan Greene on the “cueball-headed slant invasion of a peaceful game intended for an exclusively white audience.”

Kotaku:

Many PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds players blame the game’s cheating problem on China. They’re not wrong, says the popular battle royale game’s creator Brendan Greene.

Around 99 percent of cheats in the game right now are coming out of China,” Greene told Kotaku by phone. “There’s a massive cheat market not just in China, but around the world. But it’s seen as kind of a little bit more acceptable to cheat in games in China. Also geographically, they just have a lot more people than anywhere else in the world.”

Yes.

As a race, they are a group that appreciates conniving trickery and doesn’t view it as immoral.

While PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds, long available via Early Access, has now officially “launched,” it’s still got a murder purgatory island of ongoing issues to contend with. Some, like server troubles, are just a matter of polish. The game’s cheating problem, however, is a tougher nut to crack.

In recent months, PUBG has seen an influx of cheaters, some of whom go so far as to advertise their hacks like door-to-door salesmen (at least until somebody finally wallops them with a frying pan).

Some players who’ve encountered a large number of cheaters have gone on to call for things as drastic as bans of Chinese players from other regions’ servers, using language that borders on xenophobic to do so. Despite the prevalence of Chinese cheat programs and players, however, Greene said he can’t get behind that mentality. 

Yes.

We need to clear the gook menace from the gaming tubes.

We need nothing less than a digital Nanking.

Green is playing it cool though as he plots an online genocide.

“I don’t think that’s a good idea at all,” he said. “Yes, the majority of cheats come out of China, but that doesn’t mean all Chinese players are cheaters. This idea that just because you’ve got a few bad eggs, you’ve gotta ban a whole country is a bit reactive.”

On the whole, Greene said, PUBG’s Chinese community is “very strong.” “They love the game,” he said. “Why would we restrict them from playing on servers? I just don’t get the attitude of some people.”

He is attempting to out chink the chinks here…. playing it cool, as he plans a sneaky counter-measure against the evil Asiatic gaming menace.

We need Battlegrounds clear.

We need to have a merit-based gaming community.

We need to wipe the Chinese from the face of Steam.