Rainbow Six Siege world champion Beaulo calls out suspicious wall tracking kill from Mooda

The clip shows textbook pre-aiming or textbook cheating, depending on who you ask.

First-person shooter gameplay with scope and streamer facecam
(Image via Beaulo on Twitch)
TL;DR
  • Beaulo reacted skeptically to a Mooda kill that appeared to show crosshair tracking through a wall before a quick headshot.
  • Mooda claims to have only 30 hours in Siege but made a read that looked suspiciously high-level against experienced players.
  • The play could be explained by callouts, crosshair placement, and skill transfer from Valorant, but the optics raised questions.
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A clip from a Rainbow Six Siege session has Beaulo questioning whether a kill from streamer Mooda was legitimate or aided by something more sinister.

The moment shows Mooda in what appears to be a late-round 1v1 situation. He aims down sights while his crosshair is positioned on a wall adjacent to a doorway. His crosshair then appears to track along the wall before he swings the corner and instantly connects a headshot as the enemy appears.

To many viewers, the crosshair movement looks like it follows the opponent’s head position through the wall before the swing. Beaulo’s on-stream reaction reflected this suspicion, though he stopped short of directly accusing Mooda of cheating, simply saying that his play is “sus.”

Beaulo is one of the most recognizable names in competitive Siege. He built his reputation through elite mechanical skill during his pro career and won top-tier events at the highest level of North American esports.

Rainbow Six Siege has dealt with persistent cheating issues in high-ranked PC lobbies. Wallhacks and aim assistance have been common enough that the community is quick to scrutinize suspicious clips. The game’s destructible environments and information tools like drones and cameras make it harder to prove cheating from short clips alone, since legitimate intel can explain seemingly impossible reads.

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