Re: Ban 80% of players as they'r all cheating, or else...
I’m done spending money on skins. Every match is flooded with ESP users and aimbotters. When half the lobby is cheating, the game stops being a game. Anyone sitting above a 1.0 K/D already looks suspicious, and anything past 1.3 feels blatantly fake. Start banning these players or accept that you’ll lose your legitimate player base. And when the cheaters get bored, which they will, you’ll be left with an empty, dead title. Your choice. I had enough. Act now and I mean like this week or I’m off to play Fortnite and Valorant.
Stop trolling and switch your hacks off, we’ll see how good you are then.
There is a very simple solution to the problem. If they are using ESP to see players through walls and in impossible conditions, use their own weapon against them. To each game add 64 or more invisible bots flagged as real players so they can’t exclude their entities from ESP detection. No skin, no hit detection, no nothing. Ghosts. Just let them run around as bots do, leaving only the invisible skeleton. Won’t affect real players but all the hackers will start shooting into thin air and that’s how every one of them gets caught, not to mention confused as hell.
I do understand that dedicated snipers, tank drivers, jet and heli players can pull high K/D ratios, and friends on VOIP can coordinate well. That’s normal. But when you’re on infantry only maps with no room for long range tactics, no vehicles, no air support, and you still see people dropping 20, 30, 40 kills with ten or zero deaths, something is off.
You get tagged through fog, smoke, bushes and solid cover from more than a hundred meters away, right in the head, with an SMG. They move like bunny hoppers across the open map, but as soon as there’s an enemy around the corner they magically slow down, go tactical and check angles like seasoned commandos. Then they walk into a room and aim straight at you on entry, or bounce a grenade off a wall directly onto your position despite having no information you were there.
Every time you peek cover you get shredded instantly, headshot first, usually by someone running an SMG or carbine. They love those fast firing guns because their aimbots randomise hits, like landing a headshot every three bullets to look human.
That kind of consistency in chaotic close quarters infantry maps doesn’t smell like skill. It smells like software.
Just today a team revealed by our UAV in BR locked onto me like vultures even though I was in a bathroom, lying down inside a bath in one of the buildings, all doors shut behind me, lying completely still. It got even better. They pretended to scout the building from the outside while the zone was shrinking at the end of the match, acting like they had no idea where I was. The moment they entered the bathroom and I started shooting, they killed me instantly. There were three other buildings I could have been in, but as soon as my earlier separated teammate died, they zeroed in on my building. It wasn’t one player, there were four of them, the whole team, possibly on voip too. Imagine cheating and voip. What else? You want me to hold it for you when you go to the bathroom?
I also watched a guy who was clearly good at killing people, yet somehow even better at admiring wall paint. He kept staring at random walls for no logical reason.
Ohhh as well I wanted to mention the Rambos, or at least that’s what I call them. These are the players that were born under the four leaf clover and have unrestricted luck on coming up at the back of a group of people or a single person, and to outsmart every single player in a hide and seek game so that they always pat their back. Superhumans or Rambos, your pick.
As well the aimboting is so bad that almost every player using it seems to be glaring their bloody laser right into your eyes all the time. I understand going over your face on and off while aiming and moving, but that’s not it. Their laser is pointed right at my bloody eyes 100 percent of combat.
I know the netcode is bad. I know when netcode or ping kills me. That’s not it, good sir.
Sure, there are genuinely skilled players, but there are also plenty of so called god players who are just cheaters. One does not exclude the other. I’ve seen seasoned clan members pretend they were simply talented, and more than a few eventually admitted they had been cheating once we got acquainted. Honestly, invisible bot player skeletons might be the only real solution at this point.
1.8 million Cronus devices sold, 800 thousand users on one BF6 hacker Discord group, and I bet there is much more who don’t bother with Discord. You can safely assume there are 3 million cheaters in the game if not more. Add all the private cheats made by techie streamers who know a bit or two about coding so they can exploit their own viewers, it’s pathetic. Some act like they get hard to it or something. It’s like a twisted little fetish for some of them, or a hobby you pick up when you’re one bad day away from a psychopathic breakdown.
If I wanted to ban people for killing me, I’d start with the ones sprinting past walls like heat seeking pigeons and snapping to heads through fog and concrete. You can keep blaming sweats and netcode. The rest of us see the ESP trails behind the excuses.
To the “80 percent cheating is impossible” crowd. EA bragged about stopping 2.2 million cheat attempts, which means there were far more they didn’t catch. Combine Cronus sales, Discord groups, private cheats and console mods and the numbers stop being small very quickly and reach 3 or 4 million easily. By your logic there are 6.5 million copies of BF6 sold and only a few percent are cheating. I think you badly misinterpret the magnitude of the problem, because if EA stopped 2.2 million cheaters that is already around 35 percent, and that is only the ones that got caught. It is safe to assume the other half slipped through, which puts it at roughly 70 percent. So my rough estimate from observing what is happening in real play and on the scoreboard was not that far off. If you add a margin of error, 80 percent is most likely about right. Let’s say it is 75 percent, 10 percent are genuine and exceeding seasoned pros just like in anything in real life, and the remaining 15 percent are the genuine unassuming noobs like me.