Saw cheating, toxic behavior, or spectating abuse? BAR has a built-in reporting system. Here is how to use it properly.
Tags: beyond all reason, report player, spectating cheat, moderation, cheater, BAR rules
The fastest way to report someone is directly inside the game client. Click on their username, then select the Report User option. This flags the account in the moderation system immediately during or after the match.
If you missed the in-game option there is a second route. Go to server4.beyondallreason.info/battle, find the match in question, open the players tab, and report from there.
Both methods feed into the same tracking system that moderators use to correlate reports. Multiple reports on the same player carry more weight than isolated complaints.
Spectating and feeding information to a teammate is one of the fastest ways to draw community ire. Calling out enemy nuke construction timing in chat during a match draws instant reports and potential mutes. The community takes fair play seriously.
Other reportable behavior includes:
Individual reports are less effective than correlated patterns. The BAR moderation team needs to see repeat behavior across multiple matches before taking action. The reporting pipeline collects and groups complaints so repeat offenders stand out clearly.
This is why using the official system beats complaining in community channels. Proper reports get tracked. Random chat complaints do not.
Not every frustrating moment in a match needs an official report. Players having a bad game or making odd strategic choices are normal. Reports should focus on clear rule violations, not disagreements about playstyle or strategy.
When someone genuinely breaks the rules, use the system. When someone just plays weird, learn from it and move on.
The BAR player base has strong norms around fair play. Communities that enforce their own standards tend to attract players who value integrity. The reporting system works best when most of the community pays attention and participates.
Creed of Champions built its entire culture around self-policing and mutual accountability. Instead of relying on moderators to solve every dispute, members hold each other to a baseline of respect and fair play. That approach scales better than top-down enforcement alone.
[Crd] The first and only community I have seen that actually holds up to its values. I have honestly not had a single bad experience here.