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In the grand scheme of things we've gone past the question whether Ronhaar is a cheat or not; it's really about how EA and Codemasters fix this problem for players and competition. And up until there's a statement or acknowledgement that it will be fixed the questions will rumble on.
- BadMayh3m3 years agoSeasoned Ace
Another question I have is why Haas and R8G which are both run by a former F1 Driver, RG, I can't remember how to spell his name but he was the guy on fire awhile back.
Why he would risk his reputation on this makes little sense to me. RG has also tweeted he feels bad for him because of all the accusing going on which would suggest a in-house investigation.
My position is innocent till proven guilty.
The guy who developed the cheat says 70 percent of Esport drivers are cheating that means ONLY 6 guys on the grid are LEGIT!
He also said EA is going to have to pay up for REAL anticheats and pretty sure if they do we will have to pay for it, still better than F1 Life I guess🤔
- ScarDuck143 years agoLegend
@BadMayh3mI don’t believe any of the alleged cheats use hacks on every track. More likely they use hacks on tracks they are weaker on. and most likely on qualifying. To avoid being stuck in a train.
That’s how I would do it if I were to cheat.As @mariohomoh has said they are mainly kids. Who want everything now. So would not surprise me if many are cheating
Apparently Ronhaar puts some quick laps in on Xbox this week. But only half dozen or so tracks…. Did he pick those tracks because those tracks are where he is strong…. 🤷🏻♂️. If he does every track then I may be alittle more convinced off his innocence
- mariohomoh3 years agoHero (Retired)@BadMayh3m The anti cheat solutions he mentioned are very common or even standard in competitive multiplayer games, even though kernel-level anti cheats aren't unanimously loved by the community. There are other solutions too, based on different architectures.
Anyway the point is that many games from niche Arma to Fortnite have those apps in place. It'd be ludicrous if EA somehow made the game even more expensive because of it. - 3 years ago
On Broadbent's latest video re: cheating, he mentions he got a DM on twitter from someone working in F1 Esports and that what Carreton's statement said is essentially false - nobody asked any of the pros to try the cheats for "research purposes" and I found that hilarious 😂😂😂 like a game of hot potato, but then again - Opmeer backed Carreton up when he posted that statement sooo??? 😂 What is happening here lads
- 3 years ago@v8u5jco54ukp Big stakes - big falses.
- ScarDuck143 years agoLegend
@v8u5jco54ukpProblem is. Was it really someone from Codemasters 🤷🏻♂️. It’s very possible someone from Codemasters reached out to him. But I’m sceptical
But I very much doubt EA/Codemasters would have asked E-Sport drivers to test the cheats. When Codemasters have very capable sim drivers on their team. What’s more that know the game inside out and can directly communicate with the dev team
Both @BarryBL and @PJTierneyCM are more than capable of testing them and being able to keep it in house. So it doesn’t accidentally get shown up on a stream
- 3 years ago
@ScarDuck14I agree! But Opmeer went out of his way to back him up on twitter right away after that statement and when Opmeer did his interview with Broadbent a few days ago they touched on that topic and Opmeer said it's true so what does that imply?🤔
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rP_XkeF1DbU&t=413s
It's timestamped to when Broadbent says how it would've been nice to get some sort of confirmation from codies/EA re: Carreton's statement and Opmeer gave his reasons as to why they are silent, but they start talking about Carreton's blunder a few minutes before that. All of this is quite funny and confusing 😂 - ScarDuck143 years agoLegend@v8u5jco54ukp Yeah I know I’ve seen the interview. Unless EA/Codemasters publicly address it. This fiasco as you accurately put it will carry on
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