Daily Mail

Banned for cheating, UK teenager who made £1.7m playing Fortnite

- By Jim Norton

JArViS Kaye was living the teenage dream – having amassed a £1.7million fortune by playing a video game.

in the last month alone, the 17-yearold – known online as FaZe Jarvis – earned £27,500 in advertisin­g revenues, having built up a YouTube following of two million fans.

But yesterday his mother claimed Jarvis was ‘broken’ after being banned for life from Fortnite, the internet phenomenon that has earned him such unlikely riches.

Barbara Khattri, 60, said her son deserved the chance to make amends after the game’s makers banned him for cheating.

She said outside the six-bedroom £1.25million family home: ‘Jarvis made an error and he admits that. He’s broken.

‘He loves that game. He doesn’t have a devious bone in his body.

‘What i really know is that for any mistake that doesn’t physically harm a person, there should be the chance to make amends.’

earlier this week, a tearful Jarvis revealed on YouTube that the company behind Fortnite, epic Games, had locked his account after finding he had used banned software. On Fortnite, gamers fight to ‘stay alive’ during a 20-minute battle royal. The game has proved hugely lucrative for top players, with money available not just from advertisin­g but tournament­s with huge cash prizes.

However, with such high stakes, Fortnite’s creators have laid down strict rules. This includes not using ‘aimbots’, which helps players shoot.

Those caught doing so have their accounts locked and deleted. Jarvis, who is a member of the FaZe clan, a profession­al e- sports team, admitted he had used the software cheat – but claimed he only did so to make footage of his games more ‘entertaini­ng and interestin­g’ for his YouTube fans.

Sobbing to the camera, Jarvis said: ‘it didn’t even cross my mind that i could be banned for life from Fortnite.

‘i just want to be clear that this is the first time that i have ever done anything like this and, of course, i have never done this in a competitiv­e game mode at all. epic Games you know i know how big of a mistake i’ve made and i’m truly, like, so sorry. epic, i know i have to take accountabi­lity for my actions and i’m going to do my best to accept any punishment that comes my way.’

in a previous Facebook post, Mrs Khattri, an entreprene­ur and mother of three, said the ban on her son from the game had left her in ‘despair’.

She wrote: ‘A very wise friend of mine said “you can never be happier than your unhappiest child” – wow, so so true! i’ve woken this morning with it [all over] Twitter where there is both overwhelmi­ng support and criticism for him.’

Mrs Khattri, a perfomance coach, says on Linkedin that soon after Jarvis was born she became the ‘sole breadwinne­r’ for the family after changes in her ‘ personal life’. Her eldest son Frazier, 23, also defended his brother, tweeting: ‘i can’t put into words how upset Jarvis has been.’

epic has a ‘zero tolerance policy for the usage of cheat software’. it says those who do use it ‘ ruin games for people who are playing fairly’.

 ??  ?? Supportive: Jarvis with his entreprene­ur mother Barbara Khattri, 60
Supportive: Jarvis with his entreprene­ur mother Barbara Khattri, 60
 ??  ?? Leafy: The Kaye family’s six-bedroom home in upmarket Oxted in Surrey
Leafy: The Kaye family’s six-bedroom home in upmarket Oxted in Surrey
 ??  ?? Tears: Jarvis Kaye in his video apology
Tears: Jarvis Kaye in his video apology

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