No easy-anti-cheat R.I.P OW2

Damn, I had no idea there was a hack for faster ults. :open_mouth:

Most cheats are implemented in software running on the same machine as the game (this is what the client-side anticheat tries to detect). A more sophisticated aimbot would run on a different machine (or microcontroller or something similar), interpret the information rendered to the screen of the gaming PC and then inject its output through the USB connection between your keyboard+mouse and the gaming PC.

The possibilities are limited by the protocol between the server and the client. That protocol can sometimes be exploited because the server doesn’t check the validity of certain commands sent by the client. This is normally not an issue (when cheats are not present) because the game client without a cheat would never send those fabricated/unusual commands produced by the cheat.

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EAC doesn’t run on older hardware that blizz said they’d support.

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What does MSFT have to do with it? MSFT wont own ATVI until mid to late 2023, and that’s assuming no one blocks the acquisition. Right now ATVI is just concerned about boosting that P/E ratio for the stock evaluation for said acquisition. Which is why you are seeing them rushing out everything they can (stuffed full of microtransactions). Kotick and crew want to pocket as much as they can on their way out.

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100% pure cringe max

EAC is very exploitable.
I can’t think of a single EAC-protected game that doesn’t have day-one exploits.
EAC doesn’t have kernel access and most cheats that Blizz’s Warden couldn’t catch are at hypervisor level.
You’d be trading an apple for an apple…Except the second apple has an extra ten second EAC loading screen on boot.

For someone acting like they a lot about anti cheats, you sure know nothing about it.
New cheat developers bypass EAC when they just start out, imagine how easy it is for the big providers to bypass it and exploit it with even stronger cheats than are possible now.

Warden should stay.

Sounds like someone doesn’t understand “how to cheat” (or any basics of security for that matters). Sandboxing solves 100% of hardware issues. Just create an image, spin it up every time you got issues (aka “got caught”) and restart the sandbox randomizing all and any HWIDs you might have. It’s just a matter of basic knowledge and those who engage in such behaviors will know their field.

Lawlz, the only anti-cheat blizzard has in the reporting system, only time you will see a person get hit for cheating live is if a dev is watching a streamer game.

Every game I get has the same people using the same aim/wall hacks. Would not recommend anyone play OW2 until they implement an anti-cheat. The game is dead in the water for me until something changes

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Have you bought cheats, have you had the trainer on your computer and have you used them? “No” right then you have no idea how they work.

I have bought them to “TEST” what they do, how the trainer works, what dangers it entails, not only with OW, with CoD warzone and other titles, I can explain step by step what they do, how they affect gameplay, their prices, where to buy them etc

That is why I dared to create this topic because I have experienced it empirically, I do not speak with the “Theory”. The games that have EAC, their t rainers cost from 75 to 150 USD per month and exclusively advanced hackers work on them

The average Andy is not going to pay 150 bucks a month to hack on OW2 but the average Andy can pay 10-15 bucks to hack.

⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀--------------------------------→ My point
You ←--------------------------------

TBH, I can find a hacker every 1/10 games, even in Quick. It’s quite noticeable if you know what to look at. Hackers usually pause the game for several seconds to enable the hack, as it is a different overlay. If you want to find the hacker, look for a short pause (2-3 seconds) where the cheater enables the hack, and his aim drastically changes. The most used hacks I’ve seen are RH hookbot, genji dash (HS dash), Anna healbot, Hanzo with prediction!!!, Widowmaker.
Even if you report them, Blizzard won’t do sheet about it.

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Unfortunately they are already selling the hacks for OW2 and at a crazy price of 15 USD per month. Yes I have noticed “Rare” things in several games and I report.

To “Slowdown” and “persuade” hackers to do business with your game, I would do this.

1.- A personal ANTI-CHEAT made by blizzard, asking money to MICROSOFT, this anti-cheat would do a SCAN of the active apps you have on your PC when you open OW2, during loading pre-match and during play of the game. If ANTI-CHEAT detects something strange, close the app and give yourself a preventive 24-hour ban. Yes… while you play OW2 you don’t have strange programs in the background

2.- On FRIDAY and TUESDAY i will do a 1MB update to change the “Memory” this would force hackers to update their trainers twice a week, which would be VERY FRUSTANT for them.

3.- I would put the EASY-ANTI-CHEAT together with my own ANTI-CHEAT, both working together, to get 95% of the amateur hackers out of the market and exclusively leave the “Pros”, who would charge you not 150 USD per month if not 250 or 300 USD per month because of how “tedious” it will be to update the trainers twice a week plus deal with two anti-cheats.

Thank God OW2 is a new game with a different engine.

Thats what im saying.

He is being sarcastic with you, because they are selling hacks for ow2 for 15 usd at month lmfao

15 a month? Those must be mediocre hacks. Thats dirt cheap.