Earlier this week, the Daybreak Games (former Sony Online Entertainment) banned nearly 25,000 players from your survival kit "H1Z1" for using certain kinds of cheats to gain advantage over other users. According to the president of the studio, John Smedley, the action caused several players to admit they were cheating and apologize. In his Twitter, Smedley said that whoever wants to return to the game will have to admit his mistake publicly. On video. "If you want us to at least consider his apology, a public request on YouTube is necessary," said Smedley. "You do not need personal information. Send the link via e-mail." "And I'll tweet it," he added. The executive made it clear that the apology should be directed to other players, not to Daybreak. So far, Smedley posted the video of some repentant users, who can be seen on Twitter. [twitter]@j_smedley[/twitter]