Fnatic Takes Action Against Player Death Threats and Online Harassment, Involving Law Enforcement

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News/Fnatic Takes Action Against Player Death Threats and Online Harassment, Involving Law Enforcement







Fnatic Takes Action Against Player Death Threats and Online Harassment, Involving Law Enforcement

Drama

20 February 2026 15:19

TL;DR

  • Fnatic has announced a zero-tolerance stance on player harassment following a surge of online abuse and alleged death threats directed at its players, confirming it will involve law enforcement in serious cases.
  • League of Legends players Vladi and Lospa have reportedly stepped back from social media due to threats, while VALORANT IGL Boaster has previously been targeted with death threats in the past.
  • Offenders identified on Fnatic's platforms will face permanent bans from its social media channels, Discord servers, and all future physical events hosted by the organisation.

The London-based esports organisation Fnatic went public on February 19th with a firm statement on player harassment, announcing concrete measures after what it described as a recent and noticeable increase in targeted abuse directed at its players. The response includes law enforcement involvement, permanent platform bans, and a direct message to anyone who thinks threatening a professional gamer carries no consequences.

The statement, posted on X, is one of the more direct public responses to player harassment that any major esports organisation has put out in recent memory.

What Prompted Fnatic's Statement

The immediate context involves several of Fnatic's players across different titles. Vladimiros "Vladi" Kourtidis and Park "Joon-hyeong "Lospa", both members of Fnatic's League of Legends squad, have reportedly pulled back from social media in recent weeks following alleged threats and targeted harassment.

The situation with Jake "Boaster" Howlett, Fnatic's VALORANT in-game leader, is not new but adds weight to the pattern. Boaster has reportedly received death threats in the past.

Fnatic fields teams across League of Legends, VALORANT, CS2, Apex Legends, Rainbow Six Siege, and The Finals.

What Fnatic Is Actually Doing About It

The measures announced in Fnatic's statement go beyond the usual boilerplate. The organisation was explicit about two specific actions.

First, incidents involving threats of violence will be reported to law enforcement. Many organisations respond to player harassment by issuing statements or blocking accounts, but escalating to police involvement signals a genuine intent to pursue consequences rather than simply contain the public narrative.

Second, individuals identified as participating in harassment or making threats will be permanently banned from Fnatic's social media channels, Discord servers, and any future physical events the organisation hosts. The inclusion of physical event bans is notable.

Fnatic also called on its broader community to help by reporting abusive content through official platform channels rather than engaging with it directly.

More:"Empryos" Joins Fnatic

Tags: Fnatic
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Fnatic Takes Action Against Player Death Threats and Online Harassment, Involving Law Enforcement

Drama

20 February 2026 15:19

Tags: Fnatic

TL;DR

  • Fnatic has announced a zero-tolerance stance on player harassment following a surge of online abuse and alleged death threats directed at its players, confirming it will involve law enforcement in serious cases.
  • League of Legends players Vladi and Lospa have reportedly stepped back from social media due to threats, while VALORANT IGL Boaster has previously been targeted with death threats in the past.
  • Offenders identified on Fnatic's platforms will face permanent bans from its social media channels, Discord servers, and all future physical events hosted by the organisation.

The London-based esports organisation Fnatic went public on February 19th with a firm statement on player harassment, announcing concrete measures after what it described as a recent and noticeable increase in targeted abuse directed at its players. The response includes law enforcement involvement, permanent platform bans, and a direct message to anyone who thinks threatening a professional gamer carries no consequences.

The statement, posted on X, is one of the more direct public responses to player harassment that any major esports organisation has put out in recent memory.

What Prompted Fnatic's Statement

The immediate context involves several of Fnatic's players across different titles. Vladimiros "Vladi" Kourtidis and Park "Joon-hyeong "Lospa", both members of Fnatic's League of Legends squad, have reportedly pulled back from social media in recent weeks following alleged threats and targeted harassment.

The situation with Jake "Boaster" Howlett, Fnatic's VALORANT in-game leader, is not new but adds weight to the pattern. Boaster has reportedly received death threats in the past.

Fnatic fields teams across League of Legends, VALORANT, CS2, Apex Legends, Rainbow Six Siege, and The Finals.

What Fnatic Is Actually Doing About It

The measures announced in Fnatic's statement go beyond the usual boilerplate. The organisation was explicit about two specific actions.

First, incidents involving threats of violence will be reported to law enforcement. Many organisations respond to player harassment by issuing statements or blocking accounts, but escalating to police involvement signals a genuine intent to pursue consequences rather than simply contain the public narrative.

Second, individuals identified as participating in harassment or making threats will be permanently banned from Fnatic's social media channels, Discord servers, and any future physical events the organisation hosts. The inclusion of physical event bans is notable.

Fnatic also called on its broader community to help by reporting abusive content through official platform channels rather than engaging with it directly.

More:"Empryos" Joins Fnatic

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