Short description
Summarize this content to 100 words Xbox has a new ban program for bad behavior based on warnings (strikes). According to it, players who violate the rules of the platform will receive strikes; the more severe the violation, the more strikes were included. Yes, you can get one strike for checkmate, two for harassment, three for inciting enmity.The punishment for the player will depend on the number of strikes, in turn. For one or two warnings, the player will be blocked for a day, for four a week, for eight a year. Strikes can be appealed, Xbox says, and are limited to six months. The new program is effective from August 15. Xbox notes that it will start “with a clean slate”: the company resets the balance of violations for all players. Xbox also released a graph that will give players an idea of how the number of warnings depends on their behavior. According to VP of Xbox Player Services Dave McCarthy, the company is forced to apply any sanctions to about 1% of players, and only a third of that percentage face a repeat ban.
Xbox presented a new system of bans based on strikes
Xbox has a new ban program for bad behavior based on warnings (strikes). According to it, players who violate the rules of the platform will receive strikes; the more severe the violation, the more strikes were included. Yes, you can get one strike for checkmate, two for harassment, three for inciting enmity.
The punishment for the player will depend on the number of strikes, in turn. For one or two warnings, the player will be blocked for a day, for four a week, for eight a year. Strikes can be appealed, Xbox says, and are limited to six months.
The new program is effective from August 15. Xbox notes that it will start “with a clean slate”: the company resets the balance of violations for all players. Xbox also released a graph that will give players an idea of how the number of warnings depends on their behavior.
According to VP of Xbox Player Services Dave McCarthy, the company is forced to apply any sanctions to about 1% of players, and only a third of that percentage face a repeat ban.