MMO community fears PvP bots have formed a "cartel" using false reports to get you banned if you kill them for their illegal loot, bringing Old School RuneScape's bot problem to a boil

Old School Runescape old man trailer
(Image credit: Jagex)

For years, any cel🍒ebration of Old School RuneScape hitting a new player count record has come wi𒊎th a non-trivial asterisk: a chunk of those 'players' are surely bots, or automated accounts following scripted behavior to collect resources, usually to line the pockets of gold sellers.

The bot problem has peaked and valleyed but never truly vanished, with developer Jagex engaged in an endless arms race between bot busting and bot operators. But it feels like it's become especially ugly in the past few months. The bot infestation in the MMO's big PvP zone, the Wilderness, has steadily worsened, and some folks taking matters into their own hands by killing bots have reported that the botters are fighting back by using mass reports to brute-force temporary account mut🐻es or bans.

: "Wilderness Bot farms are potentially reporting players who kill them PSA," they said.

The OSRS Reddit community is no stranger toꦬ people claiming they were falsely banned or muted, and many of those posts end with a Jagex moderator say♊ing, in so many words, 'ban deserved, get dumpstered.' But Mundane_Lobster was pretty thorough.

"I 🎶built a low-level void account to test this theory, and I only used this account to specifically target the revenant cave bots which have comprehensive anti-PK features programmed into them, such as 1-tick switching from ranged to magic armor in order to land a freeze and log out to escape," they explained.

As demonstrates, they used this strategy to siphon valuable items from defeated bot accounts. It's their belief that the botters ♋behind those accounts did not like this and, in retaliation, spammed the game's report function to target ꦡthem, ultimately resulting in their brief ban.

Mundane_Lobster had posted about this kind of thing before, and there wasn't an incontrovertible smoking gun to their claims, so some players were skeptical. But on June 22, a post from likewise claimed &nᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚdash; with a few receipts of their own, and with other players sharing similar experiences in the replies – that they had killed bots in the Wilderness and inexplicably been banned shortly after.

Back on June 10, OSRS YouTuber aired a similar claim: "I don't know why I got baᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚnned. My assumption is maybe the bot farming 𒁏accounts mass-reported my account." Again, the concern is that Jagex's automated disciplinary system just sees a huge influx of reports and passes judgment without much or any fact-checking.

In all of these cases, players reported being banned for the same alleged offen🍌se, with screenཧshots, and while some details can't feasibly be verified, the piling reports at least make it less likely that everyone involved is just lying about the real reason they were banned by using the bots as a scapegoat.

Additionally, every one of these posts has been met with heaps of other players sharing their own bot-related Wilderness stories. There's no debating the Wilderness infestation – players regularly with a zillion kills in one activity but virtually n𒈔o other game time – and retaliatory reports from botters are looking more plausible by t♏he day, though I've been unable to find any public response or confirmation from Jagex regarding this trend or potential anti-bot measures.

There's some hope that𒉰 Jagex♎ is staying quiet as it prepares broader countermeasures, and the dev does , but those hopes are frankly starting get a little moldy.

"The Wildy is being GATEKEPT by a BOT CARTEL," declares a half-parody, half-hyperbole June 23 , who worried that "I've heard players attempting to PK these bots are getting mass-reported by bot farms and catching bans—while the bots themselves 🀅go unpunished!"

"Wildy is at danger, and its very important content," a top-voted reply reads. "Bots do more damage here than anywhere 👍else."

Jagex admits egregious microtransactions are "harming" its game, the player base "isn't really growing," and it's time to clean up: "The era of a tainted RuneScape 3 is coming to an end."

Austin Wood
Senior writer

Austin has been a game journalist for 12 years, having freelanced for the likes of PC Gamer, Eurogamer, IGN, Sports Illustrated, and more while finishing his journalism degജree. He's been with GamesRadar🦋+ since 2019. They've yet to realize his position is a cover for his career-spanning Destiny column, and he's kept the ruse going with a lot of news and the occasional feature, all while playing as many roguelikes as possible.

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