This is the golden rule. Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 features a dedicated multiplayer mode and a Zombies mode with matchmaking servers.
For many gamers, Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 remains one of the high points of the franchise. Whether you are revisiting the intense campaign to uncover the truth about Menendez or battling endless waves in the beloved Zombies mode, sometimes you just want to break the rules of the game to have a little extra fun.
This is where the MrAntiFun Trainer comes into play. Known in the modding community for reliability and ease of use, this trainer allows players to manipulate the game's mechanics. Here is everything you need to know about using the Black Ops 2 trainer by MrAntiFun.
Trainers work by injecting code into another program. Because of this behavior, many antivirus programs (Windows Defender, Norton, Avast, etc.) will flag trainers as a "Trojan" or "Malware." This is almost always a False Positive. --- Call Of Duty Black Ops 2 Trainer Mrantifun -
Safety and Ethics:
Alternatives:
Assuming you download from the official MrAntiFun website (or trusted mirrors like GameCopyWorld), the trainer is clean. However, many third-party re-upload sites embed miners and ransomware. Never download from YouTube descriptions or random Mediafire links. This is the golden rule
Verification: Run the trainer through VirusTotal. Usually, 3–5 out of 60 engines flag it as "Riskware" – this is the false positive we discussed.
The trainer is designed for the Steam version of Black Ops 2. It may also work with certain repacks (like Razor1911 or SKIDROW), but this is not guaranteed. Crucially, the trainer must match the game’s executable version. A patch to the game (e.g., a new Steam update) will change memory addresses, breaking the trainer until MrAntiFun releases an updated version.
As of 2026, the trainer is compatible with the final, unmodified Steam version of Black Ops 2 (version 0.0.0.1 or similar, post-plutonium patches). It does not work with the Plutonium launcher without additional modification, as Plutonium uses a different executable and anti-cheat. Safety and Ethics:
Windows Defender and third-party AVs (Norton, McAfee, Avast) will flag trainers as "HackTool:Win32/Keygen" or "Generic Malware."
While MrAntiFun has a reputation for creating relatively "safe" trainers (no malware in official releases), there are still significant risks: