Call of Duty: Warzone is suffering from an altogether different epidemic than what is keeping so many of us confined to our homes.

Being able to entertain ourselves and keep in touch with friends without meeting in person is more important than ever, and yet one of the most popular battle royale games is basically unplayable for most. Cheating in Warzone has become even more common, not less.

As the free multiplayer battle royale component of Call of Duty: Modern Warfare has gained popularity - the game had over 50 million active players as of the 10th of April - cheating has also started to become an increasing problem. Hackers utilize aimbots, wallhacks and mods that let them see the exact location of every other player all the time, as well as other cheats, to gain an unfair advantage over everyone trying to enjoy the game.

This problem has become increasingly severe as the playerbase keeps growing and growing, with larger numbers across the board increasing due to social distancing. However, a few features baked into Warzone certainly aren't helping, even though on paper they are meant to make the game better.

One of these is how easy it is to join servers hosted from other regions. Many games require complete restarts before you can log into a different region's servers - if they support it at all - while this is much simpler in Warzone. Statistically speaking, the overwhelming majority of hackers are based in Asia, but they have easy access to European and American servers as well.

The other main culprit seems to be Crossplay.