Mooda addressed cheating allegations during a recent livestream and admitted to using hacks across multiple games. The catch? He claims he never cheated while streaming.
The admission came after clips circulated showing what viewers believed was suspicious gameplay in Rainbow Six Siege. Rather than deny everything outright, Mooda confirmed he’s used cheats but drew a firm line around his streaming activity.
Voir dans Threads
According to his on-stream statement, Mooda acknowledged cheating in a wide range of titles including Roblox, Minecraft, CS:GO, Warzone, Rust, Valorant, Krunker, and even Subway Surfers. He claimed his most recent cheating occurred about six months ago in Rust.
The “not on stream” defense matters when it comes to platform enforcement. Twitch’s Community Guidelines prohibit cheating in online multiplayer games, but proving violations requires evidence from broadcasts. By insisting his cheating happened off-stream, Mooda appears to be setting himself up with plausible deniability against potential platform action.
Beyond the hacking admission, separate allegations suggest Mooda was banned by Riot Games for 30 days for win trading in Valorant. Win trading involves manipulating matches to artificially boost rank or leaderboard position, which violates competitive integrity rules even without traditional hacks.

