Ricochet’s anti-chat feature has caught and banned over 180,000 hackers in the two months of Call of Duty, and the Ricochet team is trying to maintain that security on MW2. The system was introduced against all the cheaters who destroyed Warzone and Vanguard, and while still in development the system did just that.
In a June 16 blog post, Beyond Ricochet, the developers offered how to stop the scammers who are still ruining the Warzone and Vanguard experience, and what needs to be done.
Our best deterrent against fraud, #TeamRICOCHET It occurs daily for various reasons and often in large waves.
Since our last update, we’ve announced over 180,000 bans in the region. # Battlefield And #avant-garde Combined 💪
— Call of Duty (@CallofDuty) June 16, 2022
“RICOCHET Anti-Cheat just keeps getting better and better over time,” they said while discussing what people can expect from Ricochet in Warzone 2.0 and MW2. “Are you going to meet the crooks? “Unfortunately, maybe, yes, but we’re working hard to get faster and better, to get them out of the game (pushing them or pissing them off) and making sure you have fun.”
The Ricochet team always urges players to manually report as many incidents of hackers and unusual activity as possible, and to use two-factor authentication on their accounts to protect the game against fraud. Hackers are still trying to fix the anti-fraud system, but it’s still operational.
With the release of Ricochet and the joint efforts of the CoD community, the developers are hoping for a safer and happier Warzone and overall Call of Duty experience when MW2 launches this fall.
Source : dbl tap