After weeks of frustration from the community, ARC Raiders developer Embark Studios has finally addressed the rampant cheaters that are infesting the game and outlined its plans to combat the problem over the next few weeks. In a new statement released earlier today, Embark said it is taking the issues very seriously and intends to implement significant changes to ARC Raiders' ruleset over the next few weeks. The studio also said it will introduce new tools specifically for streamers in an attempt to prevent stream sniping.
Cheating in live service titles such as ARC Raiders, Call of Duty, or Battlefield is something that is becoming an unfortunate common occurrence, with publishers and developers frantically attempting to tighten up their anti-cheat security on a regular basis. Many studios have even begun developing their own in-house anti-cheat systems in order to ensure their titles remain as secure as possible. However, they do come with setbacks. EA's proprietary anti-cheat system, which it uses for Battlefield 6, is a kernel-level anti-cheat, which often sparks controversy as it operates with extremely high privileges on a user's system. Call of Duty: Black Ops 7's Ricochet anti-cheat, which was developed in-house at Activision, also comes with the...
