Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

Call of Duty: Warzone vehicles temporarily removed due to game-crashing glitch

Add as a preferred source on Google
 

Call of Duty: Warzone players have temporarily lost access to vehicles while developer Infinity Ward works to fix a glitch that crashes games.

Recommended Videos

The glitch is triggered by driving a vehicle into a specific out of bounds section on the Warzone map, according to Video Games Chronicle, citing multiple reports. Once done, all the players in the match are kicked out and returned to the lobby.

Infinity Ward has acknowledged the game-crashing glitch and is working on a fix for the issue. However, in the meantime, all vehicles in Warzone are temporarily removed.

A playlist update is rolling out now across all platforms! This update temporarily removes all vehicles from #Warzone.

— Infinity Ward (@InfinityWard) September 6, 2020

Players do not gain any advantage by triggering the glitch, as they are also kicked out of the game like everyone else. However, this does not mean that it is not being exploited, just for the sake of frustrating other players.

Infinity Ward has not provided a timeframe for when the fix will be rolled out so that vehicles can finally return to Warzone. Digital Trends has reached out to publisher Activision for information, and we will update this article as soon as we hear back.

Warzone with Call of Duty: Black Ops Cold War

Call of Duty: Warzone has served as one of the sources for information on Call of Duty: Black Ops Cold War, the next game in the series. Infinity Ward narrative director Taylor Kurosaki previously said that Warzone will continue after 2020, and will be the “one constant” across future Call of Duty games.

Black Ops Cold War will launch for the PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC on November 13, and later on the PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X.

Aaron Mamiit
Aaron received an NES and a copy of Super Mario Bros. for Christmas when he was four years old, and he has been fascinated…
Two of Call of Duty’s greatest games are finally coming to modern PlayStations
Black Ops 1 and 2 will soon be playable on modern PlayStation systems for the first time
Adult, Male, Man

Some of the most beloved entries in the Call of Duty franchise are finally making their way to modern PlayStation hardware in July. Treyarch has officially confirmed that the original Call of Duty: Black Ops and Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 are being ported by Iron Galaxy, bringing the classic shooters to a new generation of PlayStation players.

While Treyarch has not explicitly confirmed the target platforms, multiple reports and backend discoveries suggest the games are being prepared as native PlayStation 4 releases that will also be playable on PlayStation 5 through backward compatibility.

Read more
Epic Games just took a big step toward AI-built games with Unreal Engine 5.8
Unreal Engine 5.8 ships with an experimental plugin that connects any LLM to core engine systems, and Epic plans deeper integration for Unreal Engine 6.
Unreal Engine 5.8 AI integration featured

Epic Games has released Unreal Engine 5.8, the last planned major release in the UE5 line. The update ships with an experimental plugin that brings large language model (LLM) support directly into the engine, along with a set of new tools for worldbuilding, rendering, animation, and virtual production.

LLMs come to Unreal Engine

Read more
EU won’t force publishers to keep games playable, but the Stop Killing Games fight isn’t over
The Commission rejected the proposal, but the Digital Fairness Act could offer a path forward
Stop Killing Games Logo Banner

The European Commission has responded to the Stop Killing Games movement with a decision that is likely to disappoint many supporters. The regulator says it cannot require publishers to keep video games playable after they are withdrawn from sale, but plans to work with industry groups and consumer organizations on a voluntary code of conduct for handling a game's end of life.

The decision follows months of pressure from consumer groups and game preservation advocates, who argue that publishers should not be able to render purchased games unusable once support ends.

Read more