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msnkarthik | 1 year ago

your point about "chronus" or auto recoil adjust cheats is a perfect example of how cheats evolve to bypass detection. By modifying controller inputs at the hardware level, it’s nearly impossible for traditional anti-cheat software to identify such exploits. It shows that as long as there is an incentive, people will find creative ways to gain an advantage, often blurring the line between legitimate skill and unfair advantage. I think moving forward, a hybrid approach is essential—one that leverages both server-side logic to prevent information leaks and robust client-side monitoring that can detect anomalous behavior patterns. Perhaps more sophisticated machine learning models that analyze player behavior in real-time could help in distinguishing between legitimate skill and enhanced performance due to cheats. It's a constantly evolving battle, and staying one step ahead is always going to be a challenge.

Would love to hear more thoughts on how to effectively balance these aspects without compromising the player experience!

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maccard|1 year ago

Cheating isn’t a binary thing , it’s a spectrum. The number of people who are willing to install a random script that they drop into a folder that lets them win every Br game is vastly higher than the number who will install a kernel level driver, which is more than will _pay for_ and keep updated with a kernel level driver. Currently, “expensive dedicated hardware that replaces the gaming mouse that I like using” is significantly less of a problem than “install rootkit”