Reported!

RobbieFry13·9/11/2017, 8:18:48 AM·1 votes·312 views

So my game got a little stale in normals and I wanted to spicy things up so I got a bunch of new champs w/ the IP I had saved up. I would crush a few bot games then take my chances PVP which rarely went as smoothly. . .

And without fail every time I would have a bad game, at least one teammate would say "Report (insert champ i sucked w/ here. . . ) for (some random excuse not always feeding)"

Now this happened a lot and I'm not worried about it bc it appears my honor wasnt damaged at all, but it got me wondering how does Riot determine a false report when so many people in he community try to use reports against players they think are very good? They cant have some one going back and checking every game for every report, right?

4 Comments

Silent Gravity9/11/2017, 8:26:57 AM2 votes

The IFS checks every game that is reported. It scores the chat for negativity/toxicity. The score builds up from the intensity and frequency of infractions. Once it decides to punish, it will pick out some of your recent chat logs with a variety of examples of negative chat to display.

The IFS is very fast. It generally issues punishments within 15 minutes of the end of the game that pushed it over the edge.

If there is no negative chat, the IFS will not punish for chat toxicity.

If you did not intentionally feed, it will not punish for intentional feeding.

Valid reports, even if they do not lead to a punishment can slow down the rate at which you gain honor.

Invalid reports are completely ignored.

//Edit: You're asking mostly about being reported for feeding, and I spent most of my response talking about chat. Sorry. Tired.

RallerenP9/11/2017, 8:24:44 AM1 votes

Usually there are some clear indicators when people int, so the system checks for those. It also checks and compares your usual playstyle with the playstyle of the game you got reported in. I could imagine that there are so many factors that no one person no know all of them. I would guess it also checks for how much you've played the champion you got reported with.

Kei1439/11/2017, 3:34:19 PM1 votes

If you didn't intentionally ruin other people's games. You have nothing to worry about.