@jonboy0330 Yeah, and from the looks of things, if you put "Twitch" in your username, you don't get banned for cheating either.
I'm seeing the same players use obvious aimbot, like the second they knock you, you can visually see them snap to another target, get that target knocked, then they snap to another target.
Part of the issue with that as well, is that most players see the Twitch tag and assumes its a pro and that they just got unlucky and ended up in a pred's lobby.
I've looked up these players, and its either accounts that have no clips for Apex, (the person doesn't stream, or streams other games, usually it looks like cheater is leading players to a real streamer's Twitch to distract them), there are clips for Apex, but the person has another username, (which shows up as a different player via stat sites), and sometimes the person with the Twitch in their name is actually streaming.
9/10 of the time, its one of the first two, where the person is just a cheater using Twitch in their name to make most people think they're not cheating, so they can cheat even more. That 1/10 times, its the person's actual Twitch, where its more of a 50/50 if they're cheating. Usually I'm able to tell that they're wall hacking and such, but much like the spectation hack where they can see who's spectating them in game, the ones who were cheating and streaming just the game, (and not the cheat overlay), tend to turn off the cheats and look "bad" on stream.
That being said, we need a better anti-cheat, one that doesn't care at all if you're new, a casual, a pro, a streamer, or an ALGs player. If you're cheating, it bans you.
No exceptions or overlooking it.