Vonderhaar says he was asked to ‘disconnect himself’ from Call of Duty

Keshav Bhat

UPDATE – August 19: Vonderhaar has posted on Twitter that is he doing ‘good’ and that he will be going offline from social for a while.

Activision still has not confirmed whether Vahn remains an employee of the company.

Original Story:

In a wild turn of events, David Vonderhaar said on Twitter late tonight that he was asked to disconnect himself from Call of Duty world for the day to day basis.

He says that it was asked by someone he respects, and that he ‘respects’ being told that. Vahn also states that he respects being asked to do that and wanting to say that “good luck to Call of Duty esports world heroes,” including Hecz, Fwiz, and Hastro.

Vahn has followed up with even more information and looking back at memories of the past.

He even read the comments on this post and tweeted that he had no control on anything in Call of Duty during his time other than Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 and Blackout mode in Call of Duty: Black Ops 4.

Vahn’s Twitter rant continued with a tweet about the current US President, and claimed that the President is a ‘piece of shit.’ He also almost took a shot at Activision, and other video game, executives by claiming that they are not doing enough to stop them from blaming video games for gun violence.


We’ve reached out to Activision for a comment. We will update you when you learn more.