The Call of Duty: Vanguard Secrets of the Pacific event, part of a crossover with Call of Duty: Warzone meant to gear players up for the launch of the FPS game.
Secrets of the Pacific went live today, but quickly ran into trouble. Vanguard players reported crashes kicking them out to the home screen. Some reported that the crash appears to happen when someone uses the attack dogs killstreak in multiplayer, but so far Sledgehammer hasn't confirmed this is the source of the bug. Other players have said the crash happens at random times, even when the attack dogs killstreak isn't active.
Whatever the case, the developer has disabled the Secrets of the Pacific event, but have said that any challenges you've already completed in the brief time it was available will be unaffected – you'll keep any progress you made when the event returns.
The issue only appears to be affecting Vanguard, so Warzone players shouldn't have to worry about this crash.
We're disabling the Secrets of the Pacific event in #Vanguard while we squash this bug 🪲🔨 https://t.co/hZXJVT2tgO
— Sledgehammer Games (@SHGames) November 24, 2021
Activision Blizzard is facing a lawsuit here.
In September, an agency of the US federal government opened an investigation into Activision Blizzard's response to sexual misconduct and discrimination complaints from its employees, as part of which Kotick has letter to employees, the company has announced an end to forced arbitration, a $250 million initiative to improve diversity, and a major pay cut for Kotick.
A new report published this November now alleges Bobby Kotick knew about and suppressed reports of sexual misconduct. Kotick has responded with an official statement saying the Wall Street Journal's article "paints an inaccurate and misleading view of our company, of me personally, and my leadership." In reply, Activision Blizzard's board of directors declared it "remains confident" in Kotick's leadership.