Is Xiaomi’s “Game Turbo” App a Reason for Suspensions in Diablo Immortal?

Hi everyone,

I’m looking for advice or experiences from other players who use Xiaomi tablets or phones when playing Diablo Immortal.

Recently, I’ve received two suspensions (first 1 day, then 3 days) for “automation, bots, or third-party software use.” I play solo, follow the rules, and I’ve never used any kind of bot, emulator, macro, or cheat. What caught my attention is that I always play on a Xiaomi tablet, and the game is automatically added to Xiaomi’s “Game Turbo” app, which is a system feature designed to optimize game performance.

Game Turbo doesn’t modify the game directly. It just improves system performance and stability while gaming — things like battery usage, frame rate, and background processes. But I’m now wondering:

:point_right: Could Game Turbo be triggering false positives in Blizzard’s anti-cheat system?

I’ve used it since day one without issues, but maybe some recent update or background behavior is now seen as suspicious?
I’ve now disabled Game Turbo for Diablo Immortal as a precaution — not because I know for sure it was the cause, but because Blizzard refuses to provide any clear explanation or evidence behind the penalties. That makes it very hard to know what to fix or avoid.

If anyone else has had a similar experience or knows more about this, I’d really appreciate your input.

Thanks for any feedback!

Linking your earlier post.

I’d be curious myself. Especially if the app only tweaks system performance, I’d think this not be 3rd party. But if it could be used to third party (macro, script, multi-tap), that’s something different. Hopefully you get a response

My guess to all the controller suspensions is this below. We will have to learn not to mash skills manually. I got suspended with a controller with no automation posibility

ChatGPT below:

Possible Reasons for the Suspension

  1. Unusual Input Patterns
  • If you were repeatedly mashing buttons (like spamming skills while they’re on cooldown), the system might have interpreted it as a script or macro—even if you were doing it manually.
  • Controllers tend to send inputs differently than touch or keyboard/mouse, which can trigger false positives.