The Twitch streamer Nadia Amine is a controversial figure in Call of Duty. Some accuse her of cheating. She considers these statements sexist. Now, the 23-year-old feels wrongly discriminated against by Activision Blizzard. She says she is not invited to an event for “Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3” because of her bikini photos. That is unfair. Critics counter that she has not streamed Call of Duty for months.
Who is she?
- Nadia Amine is a big streamer on Twitch who currently reaches about 4,400 viewers when she goes live. Nadia is primarily known for her gameplay in Call of Duty: Warzone. Recently, however, she has been seen more often in the “Pools and Hot Tubs” category.
- Nadia is a controversial figure: She sees herself as an excellent Call of Duty player. However, her critics accuse her of cheating. This can be seen in how she regularly plays poorly in a “monitored” environment. Streamer Asmongold has called for her permanent ban.
- The streamer defends herself against such allegations and attributes the many accusations to sexist prejudices: People likely think that just because she is an attractive woman, she cannot be good at a shooter.
Streamer feels discriminated against due to bikini photos
This is now the controversy: The Twitch streamer says on Twitter that Activision Blizzard did not invite her to the “CoD Next” event where the next Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 will be presented.
She believes it is related to her bikini photos that she shares on Twitter. However, she emphasizes that she has never shown herself naked.
She sees her exclusion as “double standards” and told Activision Blizzard this, since they repeatedly invite male streamers who post questionable pictures of themselves.
But Activision Blizzard dismissed her objection and “lied.”
As examples of problematic content creators who show bare skin, she posts pictures of Tfue, Swagg, Aydan, and Lucky.
Streamer shows hardly any more Call of Duty, has grown since then
How is this being discussed? Influencer Jake Lucky believes: The disinvitation is due to the fact that the streamer has not streamed Call of Duty for “months”. Furthermore, it is unfair to bring Tfue into the conflict. He has been retired for months.
According to Lucky, the streamer has already lost sponsorship deals since she changed her content. Therefore, it should not surprise her that Activision Blizzard ended their collaboration with her (via twitter).
Other users criticize: Even Activision Blizzard has recognized that the streamer cheats and therefore does not want to invite her.
This is what lies behind it: Indeed, there seems to be some truth to the criticism: Nadia has played a lot of Call of Duty in the last six months, but in recent months it has decreased significantly and then stopped completely.
- The last “Call of Duty” stream is from July 12.
- Since June 6, she has deviated from regular Call of Duty streaming.
Since she stopped streaming Call of Duty, her viewer numbers have actually risen steadily.
Overall, the cheating discussion is also very present: