No online game is impervious to cheaters – something the PUBG developers are all too familiar with. And while Battlefield 1 hasn’t had problems on quite the same scale, they still have to clean house from time to time to keep the fight fair, and have seen the instances of cheaters reduce since last year.
Sean Merson, from DICE’s anti-cheat team, posted an update on the studio’s approach to cheaters, specifying that “the more intricate details” of their anti-cheat measures wouldn’t be touched upon “to avoid revealing anything which cheaters and cheat program developers may take advantage of.” Anti-cheat efforts have “ramped up” over the past six months “to detect and remove more cheaters than ever before.”
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