Yesterday, Daybreak Game Company banned nearly 25,000 cheaters in its zombie survival game H1Z1. Today, Daybreak president John Smedley is giving those people a chance to redeem themselves with a public video apology.
After a few banned cheaters sent emails to Smedley apologizing for their actions, Smedley wrote the following on Twitter: "If you want us to even consider your apology a public YouTube apology is necessary. No personal information please. Email me the link."
Smedley specified that the cheaters should apologize to their fellow players, not the company.
"Although you hurt our business this is about them not us," said Smedley. A few of these apology videos have been shared by Smedley, which you can view on his Twitter.
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