Maybe you don’t want to risk a virus or a VAC ban. Here are legitimate ways to get a similar experience in Call of Duty: Black Ops.
Call of Duty: Black Ox uses VAC (Valve Anti-Cheat) on Steam. While VAC is less aggressive than modern Ricochet (used in Warzone), it is still active. If you launch the game with the trainer injected, even in the main menu, VAC can flag your account. The result: a permanent ban from all VAC-secured servers (meaning you cannot play multiplayer or co-op zombies ever again on that account).
Trainers work by injecting code into a running program. Because of this, antivirus software will often flag them as a virus or trojan (usually labeled "HackTool" or "Trojan.Generic").
Q: Will I get VAC banned if I use the Fling trainer in solo Zombies? A: If you are completely offline (Steam in offline mode), very unlikely. If you are online but in a private match, VAC can still detect the injected code. Safest to stay offline.
Q: Is the Fling trainer free? A: Yes, Fling distributes his trainers for free on his official website. Sites charging money are scams.
Q: Does it work on the Steam Deck? A: The Windows trainer does not natively run on SteamOS (Linux). You would need to run it via Proton with complex workarounds; generally not recommended.
Q: Does it work for Call of Duty: Black Ops Cold War (2020)? A: No. This trainer is exclusively for the 2010 Call of Duty: Black Ops (the original). Later games have vastly different anti-cheat systems (Ricochet, etc.), making trainers extremely high-risk.
End of Article
This guide outlines how to safely find, install, and use a FLiNG trainer for the Call of Duty: Black Ops
series. These trainers are popular third-party tools that modify game memory to enable features like "God Mode" or "Infinite Ammo" in single-player modes. 1. Safety and Sources
Using trainers involves security risks, including malware or account bans.
Trusted Source: The official and most recommended site is flingtrainer.com. Beware of ".io" or other cloned sites, as they often bundle malware.
WeMod Integration: FLiNG trainers are also integrated into the WeMod platform, which provides automatic updates and a safer environment for using these tools.
Antivirus Warnings: Security software like Malwarebytes or Kaspersky may flag these files as "Riskware" or "PUPs" because they inject code into active game processes. 2. Installation and Setup
Download: Obtain the specific trainer for your version (e.g., Call of Duty: Black Ops or Black Ops 2) from FLiNG's official site. Launch Order: Start the trainer first. Then, launch the game.
Synchronization: Ensure your game version matches the trainer version (e.g., v1.0 vs v1.02) to avoid crashes. 3. Common Trainer Features
Once active, these tools typically use NumPad hotkeys to trigger cheats:
Трейнер/Trainer (+9) [1.0] FLiNG для Call of Duty: Black Ops 2
The Last Fling
Mason’s finger hovered over the delete key. The file icon on his desktop was a skull wearing a backwards baseball cap, labelled BOps_Trainer_Fling_v4.6.exe. He hadn’t used it in years. But tonight, nostalgia was a bad habit.
He double-clicked.
The trainer menu popped up like an old friend: God Mode, Infinite Ammo, No Recoil, Super Speed. A digital toolbox for breaking the world.
He launched the mission "Vorkuta." The moment the gulag’s iron doors slammed open, he pressed NumPad 1. God Mode On.
Bullets whizzed past. He didn't flinch. He walked through the hailstorm, feeling the phantom buzz of impacts that never landed. It was hilarious. Liberating. He cranked Super Speed and zoomed between guards like a blur, knifing them before they could blink. Infinite Ammo turned his M16 into a fire hose of lead.
For ten glorious minutes, he wasn't Alex Mason, brainwashed pawn. He was a god in a digital dollhouse. He jumped off a control room balcony—fell a hundred feet—and landed with a casual thud. Not a scratch.
Then the screen flickered.
It was subtle. A single frame of static. He paused. Waited. Nothing.
He resumed, mowing down a wave of Soviet soldiers. But as their bodies ragdolled, one of them didn't fade away. He just lay there, twitching. Then he sat up. His polygon face, low-res and dead, turned toward the screen. Toward him.
A voice crackled from the speakers. Not the mission’s narrator. Something older. Muffled, like a radio broadcast from a drowning man.
"Cheater... cheater... pumpkin eater..."
Mason laughed, but his hand tightened on the mouse. "Nice Easter egg," he muttered.
He pressed NumPad 0 — Kill All Enemies. The command didn't work. He pressed it again. Nothing.
The sitting soldier stood up. Then another. And another. Every enemy he had "killed" with the trainer was getting back up, but wrong. Their limbs bent backward. Their heads spun slowly, facing the camera with flat, empty eyes.
The screen border turned red. Not a damage indicator. A bleeding edge, like a wound on the monitor itself.
His keyboard started typing on its own.
FLING. FLING. FLING.
He tried to alt-tab. The screen locked. He tried Ctrl+Alt+Del. Nothing. The speakers emitted a low, rhythmic pulse. A heartbeat. His heartbeat.
Then the menu box changed. The familiar options were gone. Instead, a single line of text appeared:
"GOD MODE: ON. YOU CAN'T DIE. EVER."
A cold dread, real as ice water, slid down his spine. He reached for the power strip on the floor.
But his hand wouldn't move. Neither would his legs. His head was free—he could still blink, still breathe—but his body was a statue.
The red border deepened. The screen zoomed in, past the digital soldiers, past the crumbling gulag walls, until all he saw was the face of the first dead soldier. Its mouth opened wider than a human jaw.
And a whisper, soft and certain, came from inside his own skull:
"No save file. No respawn. Just the fling."
Outside, the night was silent. Inside, the game played on. Forever.
Do you want to modify Black Ops without risking malware or a Steam ban? Consider these alternatives.