At 11:48 UTC, Cloudflare —a company that handles nearly 20% of global web traffic— experienced a massive degradation in its internal services. The incident triggered HTTP 500 errors and false “security threat” messages across millions of websites and applications. Although a cyberattack was ruled out, the internal anomaly left millions of users without access to essential platforms.

The outage severely affected key services for the gaming community:
This digital blackout frustrated not only casual players but also streamers, tournament organizers, and developers, whose professional activities were abruptly interrupted.

Cloudflare acts as a shield and accelerator for thousands of websites, offering CDN services, security, and traffic optimization. Its infrastructure is so widespread that when it fails, it triggers a domino effect that paralyzes everything from social networks like X (formerly Twitter) to AI tools like ChatGPT.

Although Cloudflare’s team began mitigating the issue quickly, errors persisted at least until 13:09 UTC, with no estimated time for full resolution. Users reported intermittent issues throughout the morning, creating uncertainty and chaos across digital communities.

The Cloudflare outage exposes the fragility of the digital infrastructure that supports modern gaming. From game servers to communication and streaming platforms, everything depends on a web of interconnected services. This incident may push studios and platforms to diversify providers and strengthen contingency systems.
The Cloudflare outage reminds us that even the most robust digital world can falter in seconds.
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