• Inside the Always-Escalating War Against Gaming Cheaters

    For as long as there have been games, there has been cheating. In Norway, for example, archaeologists discovered a 600-year old wooden dice carved without the numbers “1” or “2.” Nicknamed the “cheating dice,” you can imagine why such a wooden thing was carved by ye olde dice throwers.

    Nowadays, games are a bit more sophisticated than six-sided dice, but so are the cheats. Some of the world’s biggest games today – Call of Duty, League of Legends, and Destiny 2 – are almost exclusively played online, and are inviting targets for enterprising cheaters. But in the era of live-service games, fighting cheaters is more important than ever.

    As cheats continue to proliferate and impact the most popular online games, developers have begun developing stronger and stronger anti-cheat measures. Not just to improve the player experience, but ensure their game’s survival.

    The War on Cheats

    There’s a veritable buffet of cheat options for players looking to have an unfair advantage in a game — whether they want programs to help them shoot through walls or automatically aim for a perfect headshot. Or, for a little bit more money, both.

    There are many reasons why people cheat, from the obvious over-zealous competitiveness games can bring out in some to plain curiosity. At worst, some cheaters do it just to ruin the fun for someone else.

    “Cheating in games is like asking why the sky is blue. You’ll get a ton of different answers and perspectives, but there’s no definite answer for either one,” writes cheat maker IWantCheats. “The truth about cheating in gaming varies from person to person — some might do it because they’re addicted or think that their life will be better if they win more often while others become hackers out of sheer curiosity or frustration at being beaten by less talented players than themselves.”

    Whatever the root causes, cheat developers are certainly cashing in on the demand. Earlier this year, Chinese authorities arrested a cheat-making group known as “Chicken Drumstick,” who have reportedly made over $70 million selling PUBG Mobile cheats alone.

    As the adage goes, if you’re good at something never do it for free, and cheat sellers have created increasingly sophisticated operations to peddle their wares. The most popular cheats for ongoing games are offered to players as subscriptions rather than one-time purchases. Cheat makers will justify this by citing the constant updates required to stay ahead of game developers’ latest anti-cheat advances.

    And that constant work doesn’t just apply to single games – cheat makers are constantly evaluating what the next big game for cheating will be, and getting to work on how to break it. Even games that aren’t mega-hits quite yet have had cheats developed for them. A scroll through one popular cheats website offers hacks for popular games like Apex Legends and Warzone, but also smaller titles like Bloodhunt, Outriders, and Hood: Outlaws and Legends.

    Perhaps more concerningly, cheats are being released for games that haven’t even been formally released yet. Call of Duty: Vanguard and Battlefield 2042, both games released for open beta testing, have been hit by cheats before their official release date.

    “Cheating in games is like asking why the sky is blue. You’ll get a ton of different answers and perspectives, but there’s no definite answer for either one.”

    Video game developers have stood firm against cheaters in the past, but this year several major games have announced deeper anti-cheat implementation as a blockbuster feature. In some cases, anti-cheat is now announced with the same fanfare as new gameplay modes or graphical upgrades. While unveiling Call of Duty: Vanguard, Activision revealed that the massively popular Call of Duty: Warzone spin-off will receive a “multi-faceted, new anti-cheat system. In August, Bungie announced it will work with BattlEye to bring a comprehensive anti-cheat to Destiny 2. Both announcements were received by some with the fervor often reserved for new modes or features.

    But the increase in anti-cheat hasn’t deterred cheat-makers. In fact, it may have spurred many of them on.

    “COD anti-cheat has a pretty spotty history since it was first implemented. When the initial implementation came out, COD cheaters were able to circumvent this method and continue playing with their hacks in cheat mode,” IWantCheats boasts, while promoting its Vanguard cheats.

    “As of right now, there is no sign that the anti-cheat program will go away with Activision’s newest version of Call of Duty… However, we are also confident that this will not last forever,” IWantCheats writes. “Our developers have grown accustomed to working against COD anti-cheat and we’re sure that our team can circumvent it for the foreseeable future, barring any unexpected changes in their technology.”

    A quality anti-cheat, now, is paramount for any popular online shooter. The problem for those implementing them, however, is that players and developers didn’t always see eye-to-eye on the best ways to add robust anti-cheat to games.

    Anti-Cheat: The Devil You Know

    To see how the perception of anti-cheats has changed in just the last year alone, one doesn’t have to look further than Riot Games’ own Vanguard anti-cheat system (not to be confused with the new Call of Duty subtitle). When Vanguard was announced alongside the company’s competitive shooter, Valorant, there was vocal concern among players that the system was too invasive. Kernel-mode drivers — like Vanguard and Activision’s recently announced Call of Duty: Warzone anti-cheat, Ricochet — gain a deeper level of access to your PC. For anti-cheats, this access allows for better monitoring of cheat software without the limitations of user-mode applications. But they also require a level of trust between players and game developers.

    Ultimately, claims that Vanguard is practically malware were unfounded, but the controversy around it was one of the biggest stories in 2020.

    Fast-forward a year later and Vanguard is considered one of the more effective anti-cheat tools around. It’s now regarded well enough that a popular Reddit post on r/ApexLegends asks members if Vanguard could be implemented in Respawn’s popular battle royale.

    Philip Koskinas is Riot Games’ anti-cheat lead and spoke with IGN to offer an insider’s perspective on the changing perception of anti-cheat software. It didn’t begin well.

    “We dug our heels in and ate all the bad press you could possibly get,” Koskinas says. “We’re getting called nation-state malware, every single YouTube video was suddenly an expert on kernel drivers telling us how many secrets we were stealing or whatever. None of that was true.”

    Koskinas says he doesn’t want to dismiss legitimate concerns about what players might have to give up to have a fair game, but says that as time goes on it’s become the “expectation that if you are going to compete in the first-person space, you use [anti-cheat]. Especially now that anti-cheat is considered a competitive advantage in Twitch shooters and anywhere where aim matters.”

    Having a reliable anti-cheat, then, is what separates the most popular games from others, and boasting a low cheating count is now a selling point for developers.

    After encountering a cheater, the likelihood that you stop playing for a week or more is like [five times higher when] compared to a player that hasn’t encountered one.”

    As you might expect, developer investment in anti-cheat comes from a financial imperative, too. As games like Call of Duty: Warzone and Fortnite continue to generate massive revenue for companies, it’s important to protect that investment. This means keeping players engaged, and as it turns out players don’t want to engage with a game if there are cheaters everywhere.

    “One of the things we were able to show, that I think really demonstrated the value of anti-cheat, is that after encountering a cheater and utilizing the report tool to identify that person as a cheater, the likelihood that a player quits triples,” Koskinas says.

    “It’s actually worse in the first-person-shooter genre. After encountering a cheater, the likelihood that you stop playing for a week or more is like [five times higher when] compared to a player that hasn’t encountered one. We have a churn.”

    The result is that developers like Riot are pouring more and more effort into their anti-cheat solutions – but as anti-cheats become faster and more iterative, so too have the cheats.

    “10 years ago, cheats were often distributed by one to three primary providers who would have a large user base of thousands that spent most of the time undetected, and they’d be detected in waves,” Koskinas explains. “But due to how fast anti-cheats these days iterate, the cheating community tends to be comprised of up to a hundred, two hundred, in some scenes, maybe even a thousand different cheats,” Koskinas adds that it’s not just a case of searching for a single code base to detect the many, many cheats, either – some cheats with similar effects may take very different techniques to detect.

    The more cheats emerge, the more expensive this all becomes. “The Vanguard team alone is a nightmare to the checkbook,” Koskinas says. First-party anti-cheat teams aren’t developing cosmetics or battle passes that will eventually be sold to players – they’re building tools so that players stick around their games at all.

    Where Does It End?

    Dice-throwers were cheating 600 years ago, and they’re cheating in games today. A stricter anti-cheat won’t deter some players looking for that extra edge, nor those making money out of them.

    “I don’t know if this is statistically the case, but the more people that play, the more people that will ultimately become interested in at least Googling the word cheat,” Koskinas explains. From what the Vanguard team has observed for both League of Legends and Valorant, if a person cheats at least twice, they’ll continue to do so. “If you do it twice, I’ve never seen anyone come back.”

    So, as long as cheating remains, anti-cheat in games will only become more important. But there are long-term solutions in the works. One “holy grail” anti-cheat Koskinas spoke about is the ability to distinguish mouse inputs from automated inputs — detecting the difference between humans and AI — through machine learning. But even this will require regular iterations and improvements from a dedicated software team.

    You can also focus on protecting, at the very least, the core product. Activision is making sure that one of its most successful titles ever, Call of Duty: Warzone will receive a dedicated anti-cheat, while Epic Games outright purchased Easy Anti-Cheat after Fortnite became a worldwide hit. Of course, these are solutions that only the biggest, richest game creators can afford.

    For Valorant specifically, Riot’s core focus is its prized ranked mode. “There tends to be a larger investigative effort into people that are higher ranked,” Koskinas says. For the Riot Anti-Cheat team, this means making sure that the top echelons of Ranked mode, defined as the top 20% of Ranked matches, are completely free of cheating.

    So far Vanguard’s efforts are paying off. Even though the “variety and the amount of [cheats that are] available are probably at an all-time high,” as far as Valorant is concerned cheaters are at “an all-time low.”

    When I congratulated Koskinas on this, Koskinas smiled. “I’d prefer if nobody cheated. A goal without a plan is a dream? I think that’s the phrase.”

    Matt T.M. Kim is IGN's News Editor. You can reach him @lawoftd.

    Original Illustration by Saniya Ahmed.

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    Just Beyond Season 1 Review

    Just Beyond is available exclusively on Disney+ on Oct. 13, 2021.

    It’s a blessing that anthology storytelling on television is having a moment right now, but it also means all new entries into the genre need to bring their A-game. In the case of the Disney+ adaptation of R. L. Stine's graphic novel, Just Beyond, the series collects a talented group of young actors and support adults to bring a grab bag of slightly spooky tales to life with mixed results.

    Created by Seth Grahame-Smith (Pride and Prejudice and Zombies), the series comprises eight standalone episodes that individually cover a gamut of youth-oriented topics including dealing with anxiety, processing grief, bullying, and the perils of social media. There’s no unifying through line for the stories or recurring characters, but much like The Twilight Zone, there’s often a supernatural or otherworldly thread. However, that classic series, which also appeals to families and still serves as a great entry point for scarier fare, is a lot more potent and clever with its storytelling.

    The best of Just Beyond are the episodes that lean into the talents of its cast. "Leave Them Kids Alone" features the assured performances of Mckenna Grace as a freshman rebel who gets sent away to Miss Genevieve’s School for Difficult Girls, which is run by Nasim Pedrad’s Type-A headmistress. The two butt heads with gusto and create a fun clash of wills throughout.

    Arguably the best entry is “Which Witch” featuring the exceptionally talented Rachel Marsh as a teen witch trying to just blend in with the normal humans at her school. Her comedic timing and line readings are delightful to watch, and she sells the concept of a “weird” teen coming to love all of her oddities.

    David Katzenberg directs the other two standout episodes. “Standing Up for Yourself” works because of its folksy vibe that warmly frames how a small town is being terrorized by the oafish bully, Trevor Larkin (Cyrus Arnold). It’s witty and has some strange comedic beats that totally work in its favor. He then makes “My Monster” the only truly scary episode of the bunch, serving up some quality jump scares as it explores the creeping anxieties of a young girl adapting to moving to a new town amidst her parent’s divorce.

    These stories could have benefited from trusting their audience a lot more. 

    The rest of the stories fall into the “way too on the nose” category, with mostly cautionary tale scenarios playing out very broadly, like in "Parents Are from Mars, Kids Are from Venus" or "Unfiltered." Even with Disney’s conservative storytelling parameters regarding their family fare, that doesn’t mean stories have to be dumbed down to sell their lessons. Tweens and teens are smart enough to catch nuance, and these stories could have benefited from trusting their audience a lot more.

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    FIFA Reportedly Wants To Charge EA $1 Billion Every Four Years For Name

    We now have a clue to why EA Sports is considering changing the name of FIFA, its giant football franchise.

    The New York Times reports that there's a dispute between EA, the developer of the FIFA games, and FIFA, the worldwide football organization. The disagreement is reportedly over cost and new revenue streams.

    According to the report, FIFA wants to charge EA $1 billion every four years to use the FIFA license within its game. Additionally, the organization wants to limit EA's monetization of the game.

    FIFA wants to limit EA's moneymaking opportunities to strictly what can be found in the game. EA wants to explore monetizing, "highlights of actual games, arena video game tournaments and digital products like NFTs," the New York Times says.

    Last week, EA said they are exploring the idea of renaming the EA Sports football games. EA also says the FIFA partnership is different than their other official partnerships, meaning the loss of FIFA wouldn't mean the loss of official team and player names. The license only gives EA the name, logo, and rights to use the World Cup within the game.

    It seems a decision is likely by the end of the year. EA has already trademarked "EA Sports FC", which could end up being the new name of the franchise if EA and FIFA can't come to terms.

    We called this year's installment, FIFA 22, "good" in our review, saying, "Microtransactions still loom large, but small iterative changes and the horsepower of new-gen consoles combine to make FIFA 22 feel like a worthwhile upgrade without needing anything revolutionary or terribly exciting from EA’s side."

    Logan Plant is a freelance writer for IGN. You can find him on Twitter @LoganJPlant.

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    Daily Deals: Calvin and Hobbes Hardcover Box Set, LEGO Star Wars Building Kits, Dell RTX 3060 Gaming PC for $999, and More

    The Calvin and Hobbes Hardcover Box Set is still heavily discounted on Amazon, but it won't be for much longer. Get it now or you'll have to wait another year before this set drops in price again. For you LEGO enthusiasts, Best Buy is offering free gift cards on select LEGO Star Wars, Marvel, and Technic building kits. PS5 owners can pick up a copy of Ratchet and Clank, one of the only true next-gen video games (and an excellent one at that) for only $34.99. Last and certainly not least, if you're looking for a budget gaming rig that can play games like Battlefield 2042 or Call of Duty: Vanguard, check out the RTX 3060 equipped Dell XPS gaming PC for under $1K. These deals and more below.

    The Complete Calvin and Hobbes Hardcover Box Set

    Calvin and Hobbes is such a timeless cartoon classic and sometimes we see the paperback set go on sale but almost never the hardcover set. Today, that's changed. There's an instant $33 off discount that will automatically apply during checkout. That makes the hardcover edition cost less than the paperback edition. It's already temporarily out of stock, but you can still order it to lock in the price. Hurry though, it will sell out soon.

    Free Best Buy Gift Card with Select LEGO Sets

    Get a free $10 to $30 Best Buy gift card when you purchase select LEGO Star Wars, (Marvel) Super Heroes, and Technic building kits. Some of them feature instant discounts as well. This deal doesn't come around very often, and some of the sets have never been discounted in the past (like the Star Wars Premium Collection R2-D2 kit).

    Ratchet & Clank: Rift Apart for PS5

    Ratchet & Clank is one of the best looking games on the PS5 console. Of course, it's not just about looks; Rift Apart is a fantastic game overall, with an engaging story, hilarious characters, and super fun platforming gameplay. The cheapest way to get this game right now is to buy a pre-owned copy at Gamefly. If you're worried about the quality of Gamefly pre-owned games, fret not. We've purchased several pre-owned games from them and they've always come in mint condition, with original covers and scratch-free discs. They're definitely a big step up from the gamble you'd be making at Gamestop.

    New Release: Sabrent 1TB M.2 SSD for PS5 Upgrade

    This is the latest SSD that's specifically designed for your PS5 storage upgrade. It's blazing fast drive with transfer speeds rated at up to 7,000 MB/s and a PCIe Gen4 interface and it comes preinstalled with a low-profile aluminum heatsink that's guaranteed to fit in the PS5's SSD cubby. Best of all, it's priced cheaper than any other PS5 compatible SSD that includes a pre-installed heatsink including the WD SN850 and Seagate Firecuda 530 while offering the same performance.

    Dell XPS Intel Core i5 RTX 3060 PC for $999.99

    This is the lowest price we've found anywhere right now for an RTX 3060 equipped gaming PC. The RTX 3060 is no slouch; its performance is superior to the RTX 2060 SUPER and almost matches the RTX 2070 SUPER in some games. You couldn't even find an RTX 2060 SUPER PC for under $1,000 at the moment. It's paired with the latest 11th generation Intel Core i5 processor. The 8GB of RAM and 1TB hard drive is pretty basic, but since this is a desktop PC, it's very easy to swap out those components yourself with better ones.

    Alienware Aurora R12 RTX 3060 PC for $1299 (Upgrade to the RTX 3070 for $1599.99)

    Select "RTX 3070" upgrade during the customization step

    This is the best price right now for an Alienware RTX 30 series equipped gaming PC. The RTX 3060 is no slouch; its performance is superior to the RTX 2060 SUPER and almost matches the RTX 2070 SUPER in some games. It will easily handle all of your games at up to 1440p, and even 4K if your game isn't too demanding. It's paired with the latest 11th generation Intel Core i7 processor and 16GB of RAM. There's only a 256GB SSD installed, but it's a very simple task to add in your own second SSD or hard drive, and you won't void your warranty.

    There's an option to upgrade to the RTX 3070 for an additional $300. The RTX 3070 is a substantial step up from the RTX 3060. It's a bit more powerful that even the previous generation's champ, the RTX 2080 SUPER.

    Alienware Aurora R12 RTX 3080 PC for $2199.99

    Do you need a rig that can run Battlefield 2042 in 4K? If you've been on the lookout for the extremely elusive RTX 3080 video card for your (up to 4K) gaming needs, then check out this ready-to-go prebuilt Alienware Aurora gaming PC from Dell. This PC comes equipped with an 11th gen Intel Core i7 processor, 16GB of memory, 512GB SSD, and a separate 1TB hard drive for storage. The RTX 3080 is way more powerful than the previous generation's best video card, the RTX 2080 Ti, and is the best recommended video card for 4K gaming. The RTX 3080 is the card I'm currently using for the BF2042 open beta, and I can run the game at 4K resolution and over 60fps consistently at medium to high settings.

    HP OMEN RTX 3080 Gaming PC for $1795.49

    Select "RTX 3080" and "800W Power Supply" as upgrades

    Here's another RTX 3080 config that's worth a look. Although its overall specs aren't as good as the Alienware config listed above, you simply won't find an RTX 3080 equipped pre-built PC for a cheaper price. In fact, the RTX 3080 by itself probably goes for a similar price on eBay. It's paired with the latest AMD Ryzen 5 5600X processor (which can be upgraded). The 8GB of RAM and 256GB SSD is lean, but you can easily pick out and swap in your own components.

    Razer Blade 15" RTX 2070 SUPER Gaming Laptop

    If you want the best looking gaming laptop on the market, then look no further. Razer has discounted its Razer Blade advanced model with RTX 2070 SUPER. It's an excellentlaptop for the price, featuring an anodized CNC unibody aluminum frame, a gorgeous 15" 300Hz 100% sRGB factory calibrated display, per-key RGB keyboard lighting, an Intel Core i7 8-core processor, and a generous helping of RAM and SSD storage.

    Gigabyte Aero 15" 4K OLED RTX 3080 Gaming Laptop

    This is the lowest price we've seen for a Gigabyte AERO gaming laptop equipped with an RTX 3080 video card and 4K AMOLED display. In fact, we haven't seen ANY laptop equipped with an RTX 3080 at this price or less. The RTX 3080 video card has a boost clock of 1245MHz and a TDP of 105W. It boasts an 11th gen Intel Core i7 processor and weighs 4.4 pounds.

    2021 LG C1 65" 4K OLED TV Price Drop

    Today the newest LG 65" 4K OLED TV has dropped to the lowest price we've ever seen. The LG C1 OLED TV improves upon last year's highly-rated CX model with an upgraded A9 Gen 4 processor that delivers slightly better image quality, better 4K scaling, and improved audio handling as well as a new webOS smart TV redesign. The C1 OLED TV also looks good when paired to a gaming PC with an RTX 30 series video card because it has HDMI 2.1 inputs that support 4K at 120Hz and G-SYNC. It's easily one of the best (if not the best) TVs on the market right now.

    Xbox Elite Series 2 Wireless Controller

    The Xbox Elite Series 2 wireless controller is the most precise and customizable Xbox controller on the market. This professional-grade controller features adjustable tension thumbsticks, shorter hair trigger locks, wraparound textured grips, interchangeable thumbsticks and paddle shapes, custom profiles saved on your controller itself, and included USB Type C cable with charging dock. It boasts up to 40 hours of battery life and is compatible with the Xbox Series S|X, Xbox One, and PC.

    More Video Game Deals

    More Daily Deals for October 13

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    Netflix Renews ‘You’ for a Fourth Season Ahead of Season 3 Premiere

    The third season of You is hitting Netflix this Friday. But ahead of the season 3 premiere, the streaming giant announced today that it has renewed the series for a fourth season.

    Although Netflix has not shared any information on what fans can expect in season 4, including a release date, Netflix says it will share additional information such as casting at a later date. While season 4 news is minimal currently, we won't have to wait much longer for season 3.

    You season 3 will focus on the main character Joe Goldberg and Love Quinn, his love interest from season 2, as the duo are now married and adjusting to being parents as they raise their son Henry in the suburbs of California. Although Joe is now a married man, he continues to repeat his old habits of obsession with his next-door neighbor, Natalie.

    The series is based on the novel series of the same name by Caroline Kepnes, which currently consists of three books, with a fourth book currently in the works. Though don't expect season 3 to be a direct adaptation of Kepnes' third book, as the show will move in its own direction.

    While You became one of Netflix's more popular shows in its library, the series' first season originally aired on Lifetime before Netflix picked up the show in 2018. You's second season premiered back in late December 2019 before Netflix decided to greenlight a third season in January of last year.

    Taylor is the Associate Tech Editor at IGN. You can follow her on Twitter @TayNixster.

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