A professional video gamer who claims to be the best in the world at Call of Duty says she has been banned from tournaments because of her racy bikini pictures.
Nadia Amine, who boasts 1.2 million Twitch and 449,000 YouTube followers, says she has been 'completely blacklisted' by gaming giant Activision.
The 23-year-old confirmed she was a member of Passes, an OnlyFans-style content platform, but said she has never posted any nudity.
'Completely blacklisted from playing Call of Duty tournaments all for posting bikini pictures, never posted nudity one in my life. But again, the guys in the cod community can post their bare ass on social media. ggs,' she posted on X.
The post divided followers with female e-gamers backing her while some male users have cited allegations of Amine cheating to get ahead in the popular video game.
Nadia Amine said she has been 'completely blacklisted from playing Call of Duty tournaments' by Activision because of her bikini pictures
Amine, who boasts 1.2 million Twitch and 449,000 YouTube followers, accused the gaming giant of Activision of sexism
One such user wrote: 'Or maybe it’s their way of quietly telling you to go away cuz you’re not worth the headache and they know you cheat lol.'
Another user wrote: 'You actively cheated and had previously been banned for cheating by Activision and Ricochet software before you turned to other work on Twitch. This is a cheating issue that you brought on to yourself because you tried to gaslight people you were good at the game.'
Amine soon hit back to the allegations and said they were completely false.
'It’s sad to see instead of boys accepting a woman is better at them in a video game, they have to perpetuate the idea they cheated in order to sleep at night. it’s a hard reality to accept your dog shit :(', she posted.
Allegations of her cheating have been circulating in the gaming market since 2022 but have never been confirmed.
According to Amine, she also cannot host her own COD tournament without permission from Activision.
Based on this alleged ban, the gamer can now only compete in regular public matches, a serious problem as playing high-prize money tournaments is a major source of her income.
DailyMail.com has reached out to Activision for a comment.
Amine admitted she was a member of Passes, an OnlyFans-style content platform, but denied posting any nudity
Based on this alleged ban, the gamer can now only compete in regular public matches, a serious problem as playing high-prize money tournaments is a major source of her income
The California-based streamer is known to upload videos of herself playing Call of Duty: Warzone against other players online.
The over-a-decade-old video game series is beloved among e-gamers and has inspired several spinoffs and handheld games over the years.
Activision has yet not commented on the alleged ban.
The professional gamer later posted a picture of herself with her gaming system and told followers that she will be playing a '$6,900 2v2 COED buy-in tournament' on Twitch.
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