With large-scale hostilities breaking out between Israel and Hamas in the Middle East, Arma 3 developer Bohemia Interactive has issued a statement asking its players and content creators to «use their footage responsibly» in order to avoid contributing to a flood of false information being spread on social media. The studio also shared a detailed guide to help people distinguish videos made in the game from real-world combat footage.
«With the tragic events currently unfolding in the Middle East, we feel it is vital to share once again our statement concerning the use of Arma 3 as a source of fake news footage,» the studio wrote on Twitter (X) this week. «It’s disheartening for us to see the game we all love being used in this way. While we have found ways to tackle this issue somewhat effectively by closely cooperating with leading fact-checking agencies, sadly we can't mitigate it entirely.»
The use of Arma 3 footage to spread misinformation or disinformation (the latter being deliberately deceiving others with something false or fabricated), is hardly a new phenomenon. Clips masquerading as footage of the Russian invasion of Ukraine were widely shared in early 2022, and in 2021 an Indian news channel broadcast an Arma 3 clip in a report about a Pakistani air force attack on the Panjshir Valley. The same thing happened with its predecessor, Arma 2: In 2011, for instance, a documentary broadcast by British network ITV included footage of a helicopter being shot down by the IRA using weaponry provided by Libya's then-dictator Muammar Gaddafi, which was in fact an Arma 2 gameplay clip.
But in a time when ordinary people are often firsthand sources of photos and video from conflict zones, the misuse of Arma 3 footage has
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