Blizzard is investigating Overwatch team’s ‘social experiment’ hoax [Updated]

    
43
Plays well with others.

The first female member of an Overwatch Contenders team is now also the first female player to leave an Overwatch Contenders team. Ellie had joined the team Second Wind, but after a barrage of comments regarding the legitimacy of her skill and ad hoc speculation about her having someone else play the game for her, she has opted to step down from the team per owner Justin Hughes.

You may remember that this is almost exactly the same sort of harassment faced by professional player Se-yeon “Geguri” Kim. That’s sure a coincidence.

Meanwhile, over 18,000 Korean Overwatch accounts have been publicly announced as banned for toxic play, ranging from offensive language to intentionally throwing games. Which is definitely a lot of people who are no longer making the game worse for everyone, although it does spark some consideration about the game’s overall community given the number. (It might also lead to some consideration about whether or not naming the accounts is productive, although that’s an outstanding issue.)

Source: Official Site, Twitter via Blizzard Watch (1, 2)
Update 1/4 5:15 p.m. EST
Esports website Dexerto has catalogued Cloud9 streamer Becca “Aspen” Rukavina’s claims that Ellie isn’t a real person, that the player was actually a top 500 player named punisherow posing as a girl named Ellie as he pretended to be her boyfriend. “He did this for like a social experiment thing, and did not expect it to get out of hand,” Aspen said on-stream. The claim has not been confirmed by the outed player, but esports watchers have said Blizzard is now meeting with the team involved for what will presumably become an investigation. So yeah, that just got significantly worse, and this story will likely continue to develop. Hey maybe…

Update 1/4 11:45 p.m. EST
“Ellie’s” Contenders team, Second Wind, has now confirmed that Ellie was a hoax. “We reached out to Blizzard early on to help verify their identity and calm the suspicions about our newest player, doing the best we could for the time being,” the group wrote. “In a bid to respect Ellie’s request for privacy, we contacted Blizzard about not having their name published on the Contenders website. As a team, we admit we handled this poorly. More could have been done to support our players, but we had found ourselves unprepared for the attention Ellie got upon their onboarding; we had full faith in them. Due to our desperation to fill a roster, we unfortunately overlooked crucial information that should have been paid more attention to. We did not properly allocate enough time to communicate with the public as a means to support our players, and as a result caused more questioning that could have been avoided.”

Oh yeah, and the “social experiment” excuse looks a lot less likely now too.

Advertisement
Previous articleWoW Factor: World of Warcraft’s most underused zones in Classic
Next articleThe Stream Team: Marking a new year in Final Fantasy XIV

No posts to display

43 Comments
newest
oldest most liked
Inline Feedback
View all comments