Call of Duty fans are livid over Black Ops 7, and much of that anger is aimed at the campaign, a mode players say feels nothing like Call of Duty.
The criticism has piled up fast across X, with long-time fans calling it the worst campaign in the series and accusing Activision of completely losing the plot.
The tone of the complaint is simple: when a giant, cartoonish Michael Rooker stomps into the story like a kaiju cameo, the franchise is officially off the rails.
It's Michael Rooker LMAO https://t.co/2K7f0AuBC2
— Cosmic Book News (@cosmicbooknews) November 15, 2025
Fans Say the Campaign Feels Like a Parody
Players expected a grounded, cinematic thriller. Instead, they got a Frankenstein mix of Warzone mechanics, Zombies systems, Borderlands-style loot, bullet-spongy enemies, and bizarre monsters that look ripped out of another game entirely. The “giant Michael Rooker moment” has become the symbol of everything fans believe doesn’t belong in COD.
Multiple players describe the campaign as a “playable meme,” a Skibidi Toilet fever dream,” and “a test mode pretending to be a story.” Missions drag, enemy waves repeat, and the whole thing feels more like a co-op experiment than a real Black Ops narrative.
🤔 Black Ops 7 campaign gets slammed online — players call it absurd and nonsensical
— VGTimes (@VGTimes) November 14, 2025
Gamers have finally made it to the BO7 campaign, and many are calling it one of the weirdest and weakest in the series.
Here’s what people are complaining about:
— Enemies have levels, guns… pic.twitter.com/zwpAHfgYjC
Story, Pacing, and Solo Play All Slammed
Even without the goofy Rooker cameo, the story is being called “nonsensical,” “absurd,” and “mid.” Solo players say the mode feels empty, since the campaign was clearly built for four-player co-op with no AI support. Poor enemy AI, repetitive objectives, and unscaled difficulty only make the experience worse.
Technical problems — always-online requirements, no pausing, disconnects, and performance issues — have pushed even more fans over the edge.

A Franchise-Defining Backlash
Early reaction is overwhelmingly negative, with many saying Black Ops 7 has “killed Call of Duty campaigns” and abandoned everything that made the series iconic. What should have been a tense Black Ops story has turned into a chaotic mash-up of modes topped with a giant Michael Rooker cameo that players can’t stop clowning on.
Fans wanted a classic COD campaign. Instead, they got a monster-filled, loot-tier, co-op experiment where Michael Rooker shows up as a giant. And for many, that’s the moment the franchise officially died.







