Boosteroid Adds Call of Duty Modern Warfare 2 and Warzone 2

Call of Duty Warzone

Last month, Boosteroid posted a tweet regarding the process of adding a game to its library. Not only does the game have to be popular, but the team also takes into account the technical possibilities. Of course, the Boosteroid team listens closely to what their user base wants, and what are the current trends. Being one of the biggest franchises of all time, it is obvious that the Call of Duty games will be highly requested. For this reason, Boosteroid has announced that Modern Warfare 2 and Warzone 2 have been added to their “Install” section.

As of the writing of this post, the game seems to be in a testing state. The Boosteroid team will probably fix surging issues as players find them. Keep in mind, that this release is not officially endorsed by neither the developers nor the publisher, Activision Blizzard. As stated in our Boosteroid review, the service can add practically any game via some sort of wording loophole. Technically, Boosteroid is renting you a cloud machine, where you can install the game and play. Hence, the “Install” library of games.

Players will need to log in to the Battle.net app with their accounts, in order to install the game and start playing. We’ve seen reports of some users getting their EA accounts in trouble by using this kind of service to play FIFA 23 via Boosteroid. Even though playing Warzone 2 via the cloud with Boosteroid, we suggest you to proceed with caution. If you end up giving it a shot, let us know in the comments below, how was your experience. You can also reach out to us via Twitter and Mastodon.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oJca6zoI50E

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Adrià MA

Adrià is a freelance graphic designer who enjoys playing video games and writing about them. A Nintendo fan at heart that enjoys the benefits of cloud gaming and loves its amazing community. As an Editor, Adrià covers news and more at Cloud Dosage.

2 thoughts on “Boosteroid Adds Call of Duty Modern Warfare 2 and Warzone 2

  1. Read this and read your review of Boosteroid. The only thing I will point out is that your statement “Keep in mind, that this release is not officially endorsed by neither the developers nor the publisher, Activision Blizzard. As stated in our Boosteroid review, the service can add practically any game via some sort of wording loophole. Technically, Boosteroid is renting you a cloud machine, where you can install the game and play. Hence, the “Install” library of games” is not an accurate statement and is misleading to users that might be interested in the service. I had an interview with the team at Boosteroid on my YouTube channel, as well as speaking to them outside of a live interview, and they said during the live interview and via emails that all the 600+ games on their service have deals worked out with the publishers and developers of those games. They do not use as your articles put it, “legal loopholes” to illegally put games on their service. As such, they are also partnered with major companies, ie. Nvidia, Intel, Samsung, Asus, Acer, Phillips, TCL, AMD to name a few. They partnered with Nvidia to acquire Nvidia RTX 30-series blades for their upgraded hardware and they also partnered with AMD to utilize the AMD EPYC 3rd Generation CPUs. Just some food for thought, and a suggestion to fact check your statements before you publish an article with false information.

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