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Rockstar Is Updating GTA Online Community Guidelines to Combat Toxic Players

Rockstar Games is taking a stand against cheating, griefing, and harassment in GTA Online by implementing new community guidelines. Will this be the end of the game's wild west era?


GTA Online serves as the online component of GTA V.
GTA Online serves as the online component of GTA V.

For several years now, Grand Theft Auto Online has been at times something of a wild frontier, and not the kind where everyone’s riding horses like in Red Dead Redemption. No, it was far more chaotic and arguably toxic, but hopefully those days could be numbered (in a good way) now that Rockstar Games has updated its community guidelines.

In an effort to curb the rampant cheating, griefing, and player harassment that have plagued the game for years, the new guidelines which went into effect yesterday outline clear rules and consequences for unacceptable behavior. Rockstar has divided these guidelines into three key categories: fair play, respect, and safety.

Under the “fair play” section, Rockstar has vowed to crack down (again) on the use of hacks, exploits, and other third-party software that give players an unfair advantage. Griefing – the act of intentionally annoying or interfering with other players, usually with repeated spawn kills – will also warrant punishment, up to and including temporary suspension of accounts.

The “respect” guidelines prohibit harassment, identity theft, and the sharing of graphic content, with Rockstar making it clear that it will not tolerate players who try to ruin the experience for others. Many would assume that adults would be the main problem, but they’d be surprised to see the number of kids in lobbies terrorizing new players.

Perhaps the most important of all, the “safety” guidelines address the most egregious offenses. Encouraging violent extremism, illegal activity, suicide, or self-harm will result in severe penalties, including potential reports to law enforcement.

These changes come as no surprise to long-time GTA Online players, who have endured toxic behavior from a vocal minority in the community. From being randomly killed and spawn-trapped by overpowered griefers to encountering hackers who can completely disrupt a session, the issues have become too widespread to ignore.

Last year, Rockstar Games deployed a voice chat moderation tool to detect toxic speech.
Last year, Rockstar Games deployed a voice chat moderation tool to detect toxic speech.

Ironically, the toxicity surrounding the game is a result of the its underlying design. PvP action is a big part of GTA Online, which means you can start playing the game today as a newbie and, in a matter of minutes, end up being the unlucky target of a griefer with a lot of time on their hands. Switching lobbies doesn’t guarantee safety from such toxic players. In fact, you might end up in a far worse situation.

Rockstar’s recent ban wave targeting problematic accounts seems to indicate that it’s serious about cleaning up the community ahead of the highly anticipated launch of Grand Theft Auto 6. While the new guidelines may not solve all of GTA Online‘s problems overnight, at the very least, they represent a clear and commendable effort to make the game a more welcoming and enjoyable experience for all.

With GTA 6 on the horizon, Rockstar is likely hoping that a more positive GTA Online community will carry over to the new title. Whether these guidelines prove effective remains to be seen, but for now, the message is clear: shape up or get tossed out.

Comments: 5 replies

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Avatar of H4ck3r
H4ck3r

Active member

101 messages 63 likes

Harassment can mostly be handled by players. Just block people. The cheating and griefing though? Yeah that has to be done by Rockstar.
I hope they use this as a means to ensure the next one is better protected against this nonsense from the start.

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Avatar of TurboToucan50
TurboToucan50

Member

46 messages 13 likes

Is this actually going to help though? Cause they have done stuff in the past that really didn't fix the problems everyone complains about when it comes to toxic players. Like why not just push them all onto their own server?

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Avatar of Genius
Genius

Active member

108 messages 62 likes

This is toxic but for some people, toxic players can be someone swearing or just making jokes. It is a slippery slope we need to be aware of.

We don't want too much policing in online gaming.

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Avatar of plasmapeacock
plasmapeacock

Member

42 messages 17 likes

Just make better features for blocking people. Like if someone is griefing, make it so when a player blocks them they can't be in the same server as them. If this happens enough times to the same player, they will end up on servers all by themselves or with other griefers. Do this for everything. Let the problem solve itself by giving players tools that work. I don't want people getting banned for saying stupid crap. I can block them if I don't want to hear it or read it. Can we all just go back to being adults?

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Avatar of Crusader
Crusader

Active member

125 messages 72 likes

I doubt this will fix anything. It rarely does. It just ends up punishing regular players.

This. All of this.

This is an adult game for adults. The fact that people want to hold each others hands and babysit each other is ridiculous.

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Caleb Sama
Caleb Sama // Articles: 15
Ever since Caleb discovered GTA 3, he has taken it upon himself to learn everything there is to know about the fictional worlds created by Rockstar Games. His obsession with Red Dead Redemption earned him the nickname John Marston. Thankfully, GTA V was released a few years later, and he found a new game to fixate on. Now, he simply crawls the web like a bot, searching for every bit of information that might give him a headstart on GTA 6. // Full Bio