You know their anti-cheat is bad when they want you to send them video evidence of cheaters.
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Edited by Strider: 4/16/2020 8:48:41 AMWhat anti-cheat? They are too stingy to purchase a proper version and their own cannot deal with any and now they are asking us to provide prove that they then can look at and ban people. Edit: spelling
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But post any video of any cheater here , and we get the ban lol.
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Edited by Krantzstone: 4/16/2020 1:14:14 AMWorse still, it's a major step down from Halo: Reach, where you could literally save entire matches on Bungie's own servers for free, where you could examine the match from every conceivable angle or from any player's POV, pause, rewind, etc. so it would be pretty obvious and easy to tell if someone was cheating, because the entire match could be reenacted exactly as it played out originally. Whereas now, you're lucky if you can grab 30 seconds-2 minutes worth of footage from your POV only (more if you have a fast external drive or game capture card/device), which isn't particularly useful in determining whether someone on the opposing team is cheating since it could just as easily be lag from peer-to-peer (although it's often obvious network manipulation via a lagswitch). Not to mention all the time and bandwidth wasted uploading that footage just so you can share it to Bungie, who might take weeks to even look at it (if they do at all), before concluding that giving the cheaters a one-week 'Time Out' is punishment enough for going around committing federal cybercrimes that even the FBI is out actively prosecuting internationally along with Europol. :P https://techcrunch.com/2019/01/28/ddos-for-hire-europol-users/ https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20190624005203/en/DDoS-for-hire-Websites-Comeback-FBI-Crackdown-Nexusguard-Threat