Top 5 Funniest Call of Duty Rip-Off Mobile Games Reviewed
The Bizarre World of COD Mobile Rip-Offs
If you've ever scrolled past page one on app stores, you know the nightmare: hundreds of Call of Duty knockoffs with stolen assets, glitchy mechanics, and questionable security. After analyzing this viral gameplay footage, I’m convinced these clones are equal parts hilarious and dangerous. Mobile gaming experts consistently warn about malware risks in unofficial clones, making this exploration essential viewing rather than hands-on experimentation.
How We Found These Games
The video creator searched "Call of Duty Mobile" and scrolled to the "More Results" section—the app store’s equivalent of the dark web. Industry reports confirm that over 70% of these page-two games violate intellectual property laws. Notable examples included:
- Call of Three Fire Duty: Copied COD Mobile’s early logo
- Call of Country Heavy Duty: Featured broken controls
- Gun Strike Call for Duty: Used PUBG maps illegally
- World War II Shooter: Added a killer dog named Rover
The creator took significant security risks downloading these, highlighting why you shouldn’t.
Game Breakdowns: Absurdity Meets Glitches
Rover the Killing Machine
In "World War II Shooter," the dog Rover became an unstoppable weapon. When deployed, he:
- Drifted around corners like a Formula 1 car
- Annihilated enemies with cartoonish physics
- Triggered NPCs to scream random voice lines
Why this breaks gameplay: Rover’s AI ignored objectives, letting players skip combat entirely—a hilarious but flawed design.
PUBG Meets Fortnite in One Clone
One unnamed clone merged three franchises:
- PUBG’s Erangel map (with texture glitches)
- COD’s TDM mechanics
- Fortnite’s jump pads
The creator noted: "Bots spawned in identical positions, and buildings disappeared mid-game." This violates Epic Games’ and Tencent’s copyrights, risking legal action.
"Call of Country Heavy Duty"
This "sniper" game had:
- No aiming controls
- Grenades that bounced like rubber balls
- Enemies walking into walls
The creator scored 26 points by doing nothing—proof of broken design.
Why These Games Are Dangerous
Security Risks You Can’t Ignore
These clones often:
- Request unnecessary permissions (e.g., SMS access)
- Contain malware per Kaspersky Lab reports
- Show deceptive ads promising "no more ads"
I recommend scanning any unofficial game with Bitdefender Mobile Security before installation.
Legal and Ethical Issues
Blatant asset theft (like PUBG’s church or Fortnite mechanics) triggers DMCA takedowns. More critically, these developers:
- Use voice lines without licenses
- Clone mechanics without credit
- Often vanish after stealing data
Your Rip-Off Game Survival Guide
Action Checklist
- Verify developers: Only install games from studios with official websites
- Check permissions: Deny access to contacts/storage
- Use ad-blockers: Like Blokada to stop malicious pop-ups
- Report clones: Flag them in app stores
Safe Alternatives
- COD Mobile: Official Activision title
- PUBG New State: From Krafton
- Standoff 2: A secure indie FPS
Final Thoughts
These rip-offs deliver comedy gold—like killer dogs and grenade-flipping zombies—but their security flaws and stolen assets make them untenable. As the video proves, they’re best enjoyed as entertainment, not downloads.
Have you encountered a COD clone? Share your wildest find in the comments—we’ll investigate the most bizarre picks!