Overwatch 2 has not been having a good time of it in 2023. May brought the unwelcome news that Blizzard's original plans for the game's post-launch support were being changed, mainly the promised «original vision» of PvE story content. Players in the main hated this, with many pointing out this was why Overwatch 2 was considered a necessary sequel in the first place. Shortly afterwards the game was released on Steam, and this discontent found its expression in Steam review bombing.
Blizzard has for the most part decided it's best to keep schtum and get on with improving the game, and amid all the disappointments and groaning it's important to remember that Overwatch 2, for all its faults, is a pretty good time and still has a huge player base. It has also, like every popular competitive shooter, become more active about how it combats toxic behaviour and cheating.
A new "Defense Matrix" anti-cheat update outlines some of what Blizzard's been up to recently, with the name being the company's catch-all term for any griefing issues (and an in-joke based on one of character d.Va's key abilities). The first change announced is the complete removal of the everything-goes text chat option. Overwatch 2 originally had three settings players could choose between: unfiltered, mature, and friendly. Unfiltered has no restrictions, mature allows certain common swears that can reasonably be described as adult rather than taboo, while friendly filters out any words deemed obscene, vulgar, or offensive.
Blizzard says the 'unfiltered' option «allowed harmful language and phrases that have no place in our community» so it's gone, with all players on that setting being moved to 'mature'. Blizzard ends on the text chat by saying the «online
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