Call of Duty Ricochet Anti-Cheat has removed 90,000 accounts in banwaves this week, Check details – With the global rollout of the RICOCHET Anti-Cheat kernel-level driver on PC, Call of Duty: Warzone saw a significant drop in in-game cheat reporting, according to internal data. #TeamRICOCHET was able to catch and disable accounts quickly, bringing cheating within Warzone to an all-time low during the holiday break. 90,000 accounts were removed in ban waves this week. Check all details in this article. For Call of Duty Latest Updates follow InsideSport.IN
Call of Duty Ricochet Anti-Cheat has removed 90,000 accounts in banwaves this week, Check details
#TeamRICOCHET update: 90,000 accounts were removed in banwaves this week. Happy Friday. pic.twitter.com/4dTxQP0HZi
— Call of Duty (@CallofDuty) March 19, 2022
As time has progressed cheat developers have looked for new ways to try to exploit the game. Some have succeeded, many have not. While a recent rise in cheating is not at the level it was during Verdansk, according to our data, any increase is frustrating. Our team is constantly monitoring and will continue every effort to prevent and combat this wherever possible. This back and forth is expected, and while anti-cheat is not a magic bullet, this is a battle we’re committed to fighting.
Call of Duty Ricochet Anti-Cheat has removed 90,000 accounts in banwaves this week, Check detailsAlso Read: Call of Duty: Mobile World Championship returns for 2022 with over $2 million in prize money
Call of Duty Ricochet Anti-Cheat has removed 90,000 accounts in banwaves this week, Check details
RICOCHET Anti-Cheat™ relies on data to identify cheating behavior and make our ban waves more impactful. As we collect data from machines determined to be cheating, our goal is to ensure they aren’t taking wins from our deserving community.
#TeamRICOCHET also uses several in-game mitigations to reduce the impact of cheating players, beyond banning accounts. One mitigation technique we’ve been testing is something we call Damage Shield. When the server detects a cheater is tampering with the game in real-time, it disables the cheater’s ability to inflict critical damage on other players. This mitigation leaves the cheater vulnerable to real players and allows #TeamRICOCHET to collect information about a cheater’s system. We track these encounters to ensure there is no possibility for the game to apply a Damage Shield randomly or by accident, no matter the skill level. To be clear, we will never interfere in gunfights between law-abiding community members. Damage Shield is now out of testing and deployed across the globe.
Call of Duty Ricochet Anti-Cheat has removed 90,000 accounts in banwaves this week, Check details
For Call of Duty Latest Updates follow InsideSport.IN