this post was submitted on 14 Nov 2025
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Why would you even send the location of players behind walls? You can just do the visibility check on the server first. But hey that's extra CPU cycles that they don't want to be spending on helping you.
Visibility check of what?
This amounts to making players use thin clients and putting all visual and audio rendering on the server if you want it to work and not suck. Will you be happy to save £1000 on your PC at the cost of having games cost £150 a pop? Thought not. Or did you think the "extra CPU cycles" were just free?
@FishFace @x00z my small thought -> i think today no solution can prevent "cheaters" because you can't differ "cheaters" from users anymore if they want to.
Here is why ->
One PC is running the game -> a second PC emulates Keyboard and mouse inputs using a CAM (Capture Card) / Sound (microphon / digital capture) and an on the Game trained AI.
So what does any "cheat protection" offer if they don't protect against serious cheating ?
PS: "The only still working protection is lan play with control over hardware / software and players like done on real events"
Yes, there is no way to prevent all cheats. However, to prevent as many as possible, you need to use all available methods. It's quite reasonable that kernel-level anti-cheat should not be available, as it it's an overreach and a security risk. However, client-side anti-cheat is not that.
It's a very hard thing to check for though especially with how complex the world can be in games today. Even if it was feasible you don't know where a client will be in a few frames so you basically need to do a "what players can be seen from this general location" check. The higher movement speed the bigger of a volume is your possible viewpoint.
This is also ignoring all the things you need replicated even when you can't see the player such as footsteps or them shooting or interacting with something.