When their account receives a ban (which it often doesn’t as most cheats go by undetected), the cheater can just create another account to continue doing the things that he/she was already doing in the Valve servers.
However, something like this is not easy in Riot Games’ latest shooter Valorant. The devs are quite serious about the competitive integrity of the game and detected cheaters will be receiving an HWID ban, in addition to an account ban.
So, it’s not like there will be zero chance of hacking in Valorant; it’s just that the game is going to make cheating a very expensive affair for repeat offenders. Not only will they be forced to invest in new system hardware, but they will also have to rebuy hacks which do not come cheap.
Now, after Valorant game director Joe Ziegler’s latest tweet, it would seem that the devs will be adding a bit of guilt to their permaban measures.
In the tweet, Ziegler says:
He then completes the tweet with the prototype of a pop-up message which will be displayed to cheaters in Valorant. It reads:
The message is then followed up by an ‘I Understand’ button, which the cheater will have to click on as a sign of admitting to their offence.
Admitting to your actions can indeed cause a sense of guilt in many players, and the following reply to the tweet reflects that sentiment perfectly:
0 votes