MW3 player tragically dies to their own killstreak just shy of a nuke

An MW3 player shares a clip of a monumental mistake they made after going on a ridiculous killstreak, with their own killstreak working against them.

It’s not an easy thing to go on a massive killing streak in MW3 and it takes a lot of luck to make it happen in the first place.

MW3 Mosquito Drones flying at the camera

Many players spend a lot of time trying to get to that 30-kill nuke and when everything is going right for them, it can help lead them to that prized 30-kill Nuke reward.

However, a player hasshared a clipwhere everything was going right for them in a match, but their own mistake ended everything.

Warzone player taking cover

MW3 player gets friendly fired by their own killstreak

The clip was shared onthe MW3 subredditwith a warning title: “I’ve learned the hard way: don’t rush people when you are on a 21-kill streak and your swarm killstreak is up.”

The gameplay shows the playerpopping off in a matchon the Greece map, with the player sprinting around and taking out just about every enemy they come across with ease.

Warzone and Black Ops 6 player using AMR Mod 4

But it all comes crashing down when they get too aggressive, pushing on an enemy, only to be blown up by their own Mosquito Drone killstreak that they activated.

Despite the tragic, yet hilarious, end to the clip, most of the comments are complimentary of the players’ abilities, with one user saying, “You got great aim bro! Love seeing MNK players on here.”

New map coming in Black Ops Season 2

Unfortunately, not every response was positive, and there were a large amountof cheating accusationsfor how easily they were getting kills in the clip.

Surprising MW3 rifle is actually Warzone’s fastest-killing AR

Black Ops 6 player has “beaten” the game with incredible 100% completion challenge

Black Ops 6 devs already have the answer to fix Scorestreaks and players want it now

“Bro is ice skating at like 3x sprint speed and everyone is like, ‘How could this be cheating?'”

Most of theseaccusations take issuewith how the opponents in the lobby don’t seem to react to the player at all, leading many people to believe they have reverse boosted their lobby.

Reverse boosting is when a player intentionally tanks their rank in a game by purposefully playing poorly for a few games, so that the game will put them in a low-skill match where they can dominate.

It is odd that the majority of the discourse around the clip is focused on the player’s moves, rather than the untimely death they experience at the end.