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RSVSR Guide to Black Ops 7 weapon nerfs and Meltdown debate
The last day in Black Ops 7 has felt like that moment when you load into a match and instantly know something's different. In one lobby you've got people arguing about the patch, in the next they're swapping rumors about the game's health, and it all blends into the same restless noise. If you've been grinding daily—or even just dropping in for a few games—you've probably seen the chatter around BO7 Bot Lobby pop up alongside the usual meta talk, which says a lot about how hard folks are trying to control their experience right now.
What the patch actually changed
Let's talk weapons first, because that's what you feel in your hands. The M15 MOD 0 and the Dravec 45 finally got their ranges trimmed back. Not a tiny tap, either—it's the kind of change that forces you to stop taking lazy angles and expecting free kills. You'll notice it fast: those "why am I dead from over there." moments are rarer, and up-close fights don't end quite as instantly if you're not glued to the same two builds. Ranked needed this. It was turning into copy-paste loadouts, and that's never a good sign for a competitive playlist.
Ranked fallout and player habits
Of course, timing matters. Anyone mid-qualifiers is probably fuming, because muscle memory doesn't care about patch notes. A lot of teams had their spacing built around the old damage drop-offs, and now you've got players second-guessing when to chall, when to back off, when to play for trades. Regular players are adjusting too, just in a different way. You'll see more experimenting in the next week—more mid-range options, more people trying to make "off-meta" work, and more frustration when it doesn't.
The bigger worry: sales talk and fatigue
Then there's the report everyone's doomscrolling: sales allegedly down close to 60% versus last year's monster release. If that's even remotely accurate, it's not just a bad weekend—it's a signal. Feels like shooter burnout is catching up with the casual crowd, and competition is brutal right now. People aren't necessarily mad at BO7. They're just tired. And when players are tired, they don't argue about recoil patterns—they just stop logging in.
Meltdown returns, and not everyone's happy
The Meltdown map coming back should've been an easy win, but it's kicked off the usual civil war: "keep it classic" versus "modernize it." The layout's familiar, sure, yet some of the grit is gone, and that's what veterans latch onto. Funny thing is, higher fidelity can make a place feel less real. If BO7 wants to keep momentum, it needs to balance the competitive fixes with the stuff that keeps people emotionally invested—and when players do decide to grind again, services like RSVSR fit naturally into that routine by helping folks pick up the in-game currency and items they want without turning it into another exhausting chore.