Call of Duty's anti-cheat system As part of its ongoing battle against cheaters, the team behind Call of Duty's anti-cheat system known as Ricochet has revealed that it has added a new feature where players found to be cheating will be stripped of their weapons.
This latest feature is a new update on the current state of Call of Duty's anti-cheat. blog update announced via Two more important anti-cheat techniques were announced, namely Concealment and Damage Shield, which appeared earlier.
Richochet's first anti-cheat feature, Damage Shield, essentially ensures that when a cheater is detected in the match, clean players do not take damage from the cheating player's bullets. The cloaking feature makes it impossible for detected cheaters to see or even hear clean players and their bullets.
Both of these anti-cheat systems will continue to work in Call of Duty: Vanguard and Warzone as before, but now with newly announced "DisarmIt will be combined with the ” feature. This is designed to prevent cheaters from disrupting the game at any level, and will disable cheaters' weapons to prevent them from harming players who play clean. As the Ricochet team explains in their blog post, “The purpose of the features is to allow cheaters to analyze their data in-game while reducing their ability to affect a clean player's experience.”
The team says that while the new anti-cheat features have adopted standout solutions, bans remain the biggest deterrent against cheating, banning over 180.000 players in Warzone and Vanguard. It also confirmed that the Ricochet anti-cheat system, including its PC core-level driver, will be up and running for the upcoming launch of Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 and Warzone 2.0.
Call of Duty's anti-cheat system update is also coming in a busy week for publisher Activision Blizzard. The company shared a series of information about Overwatch 4 after a long wait, including the October 2 release date. At the same time, nearly a year of sexual harassment, assault, and lawsuits alleged to have fostered an inappropriate company culture were settled, with the company finding that there was no "widespread or systematic harassment".
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