Content creator LukeManuFC has finally re-entered the multiplayer lobbies of the original 2011 Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 following the expiration of a 4,999-day ban. The restriction, which spanned over 13 years, originally triggered after automated systems flagged his in-game activity as potential cheating. The creator has maintained that the decision was an erroneous flag on his account rather than a legitimate infraction.
Upon attempting to log into the classic shooter as the expiration date approached, the player was initially met with a lockout screen indicating that a few hours still remained on the counter. After waiting out the final moments of the 13-year penalty, his account access was fully restored, allowing him to successfully queue into a live match for the first time since the early 2011 lifecycle of the game.
Despite the age of the title and the franchise moving through over a dozen subsequent annual releases, the legacy multiplayer servers remain operational. Active player counts during his return session showed over 200 users concurrently online on Wednesday evening. While this figure is a small fraction of the active populations found in contemporary titles like Black Ops 7, it underscores a persistent community dedicated to preserving the legacy matchmaking of older Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3-era installments.
Severe penalties of this duration are rare but not entirely unprecedented within Activision’s moderation history, with some legacy players previously documenting account bans stretching up to 67 years. The conclusion of this particular timeline comes just ahead of the next major franchise milestone, with the community currently anticipating the launch of Modern Warfare 4 and its updated DMZ mode scheduled for October 23.
