Which games are the best one?

I’m looking for games that are excellent.

PUBG? CS2? Dota 2? I play only CS2 out of my list, but who knows, maybe you will like 2 other games

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Battlefield 1 :innocent:

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Are you looking for just good MM or are great games on their own also okay?
Also lmaoing at the thought of Rito MM being good.
Not to mention that the site you linked is about as good a estimation as pure winrate on its own.

Sorry, guys. OP is a spam bot account. I’ve suspended their account, but please feel free to continue discussing any fun games you’ve been playing recently. :pensive:

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How were you able to detect that?

I’ll focus on some of the options available to normal users. Website moderators have more tools available, but I think these are more interesting (and it’s something normal users can see too).

Understand that while normal users can learn to identify bots based on limited information, the few methods I’m going to describe aren’t infallible. Website moderators will always have more tools available to make these judgements with more confidence and accuracy than normal users. If you’re online and suspect an account is a bot, it’s best to report them to that website’s moderation team.


We have several automated systems in place. These catch a lot of spam before it’s every posted. More often – we prevent these bots from signing up at all.

Bots that do get through will often be flagged for a suspicious action. If they are flagged, but it’s not something we automatically block the account for, there’s other tools in place for detecting a bot account.

Here’s a few things that users can look at, regarding sign-ups:

  1. Username will often be Firstname_Lastname or productname.

  2. Name is usually identical to the username. Note that this is an optional field (despite bots almost always filling it out), and it’s uncommon for real users to fill the field out this way.

  3. Email address. You can’t see this, but they’re often one of these options:

    • FirstnameLastname, SEO (or similar keyword), or a bunch of gibberish…
    • …often @ a domain mimicking a real website. Although legitimate domains are sometimes used too. We block a lot of disposable email domains, so those bots don’t get past the sign-up modal.
  4. Other optional fields are left empty (or first valid option, unless there’s a preset answer like with the “Name” field). Required fields are treated similarly, with repeating the username as a common fallback.

  5. Normal users can’t see this either, but in the past many “bot waves” would come from the same IP address. Nowadays, most of these will be prevented from signing up at all. But it’s likely still true to some extent – e.g., a lot of small wikis will see groups of bots that share an IP address.

  6. They’ve spammed other websites. In the past, you’d see an identical (or near-identical) message on multiple other websites. These bots are now using tools like ChatGPT to create more unique messages, but they still contain the same keywords. E.g., played, Free Fire Battleground, League of Legends, MMR, and the URL they’re advertising.


That’s a few of the things that people can look at. Website moderators (for any platform) have more tools available. But I think these are particularly interesting to look at, at least with these ChatGPT bots.

I don’t really go into it here—as it has to do with when certain flags are automatically triggered—but there’s also some stuff that these bots do differently from older bots in order to more human.

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Idk know if you guys heard about this game called Unturned

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Very useful information. I know that the site has protection from spam bots and even when my friend made a comment on the post, his message was marked as spam. But these are most likely keywords that allow you to identify spam bots and isolate them from the forum. Undoubtedly, the forum moderation will check the user, including his IP address, name, etc., to make sure that the person is not a bot. So this system is pretty good.

I also would like to add that bots are bad at subtext. What is more, AI-generated content may exhibit repeated phrases due to its training on massive amounts of data.

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