Feb 16, 2011 09:25 GMT  ·  By

Call of Duty: Black Ops is set to receive yet another patch in the near future, which is scheduled to fix some of the scoring and leaderboard issues that are affecting the first-person shooter.

Call of Duty: Black Ops has been a massive success for its publisher, Activision, and developer, Treyarch, even if the studio has had to use massive resources in order to release multiple patches and keep players happy.

Now, it seems that a new patch is set to appear in the near future, which is going to solve some of the issues with score registering and ones pertaining to the leaderboards of the game's online multiplayer feature.

Treyarch Community Manager Josh Olin said on Twitter, "We're aware of this issue, only some are affected, and it will be resolved in the next patch... Which isn't too far off."

It seems that the high scores of players using the recently released First Strike downloadable map pack on the Xbox 360 aren't being recorded properly, which sparked quite a lot of outrage on the game's official forums.

Still, as you can see, Treyarch is going to solve all these issues soon enough.

Black Ops received multiple patches since its release last year, with the most recent one, 1.06, being deployed onto all platforms in the last few weeks.

Since then, Treyarch said that there were lots of gamers completely satisfied with the experience, even on the PlayStation 3, which saw massive problems.

Even so, the studio is working hard to find and fix all of the issues reported by Black Ops players.

Besides this, Treyarch is also working on porting the First Strike map pack to the PS3 and PC versions of Black Ops, after releasing it at the beginning of the month as a timed exclusive for the Xbox 360.

First Strike will bring four new multiplayer maps and a new scenario for the Zombies mode.