The company behind AimJunkies destiny 2 cheats, vowed to fight Bungie in court, likening the studio’s legal strategy to “throw s*** at the wall” and see what sticks. backed up in a lawsuit against AimJunkies in late April, with a judge ruling that the studio’s argument was weak and AimJunkies had failed to prove how it infringed Destiny’s copyright. Bungie was given the opportunity to sue again, and it did.
AimJunkies Claim Destiny 2 Cheats Not Illegal
AimJunkies argues that because cheating is not illegal, neither is Destiny 2 cheat software. The company plans to go one step further and issue subpoenas to a number of companies, including Valve, which it believes have Steam data to back up claims that Destiny 2 cheats had no impact on the game’s community. AimJunkies claims the game had a high player count when its software was being used by scammers.
“Please understand that cheating is not illegal and game companies want to make cheating illegal because they have no control over their players,” read AimJunkies’ statement ( torrent freak). âThey want the courts to do things they can’t do alone before they have vast resources and technology at their disposal. , wants to die from thousands of cuts.”
The gaming community hardly agrees. AimJunkies doesn’t have much of a social media presence, but tweets announcing cheats for the latest games, including MultiVersus, haven’t won the favor of multiplayer players who are tired of having their experience tainted.
In other news, Sony seems to be eyeing the PS Store’s excavatorware issue, with Microsoft claiming Sony will benefit from launching first-party games on PS Plus.