Valve just dropped the hammer on Counter-Strike cheaters. Big time.
For the past 24 hours, reports have been coming in from all over the Counter-Strike-o-sphere that a new ban wave hit cheaters hard. Data-mining site SteamDB puts the number at 11,435 (and counting) bans administered by the VAC (Valve Anti-Cheat) system today. Thatās a significant spikeāthe largest in more than a year
Now, VAC is designed to catch red-handed rule-breakers in the act, so it tends to zap a couple thousand people per day. What makes this spike important is the underlying mechanics of it. From the looks of things, Valve upgraded VAC to detect multiple hard-to-catch paid cheat programs. I wonāt list their names here, but I will post pictures of banned dickheads sobbing into the empty space where their knife collections once rested (via TwitchDanmark):
And here are messages sent to users of a couple large cheat providers:
I reached out to Valve to get a better understanding of how they struck the latest blow in their ongoing battle against CSGOās massive cheating problem, but theyāve yet to reply. However, in-the-know players chalk it up to Untrusted bans, which occur server-side and boot people when they perform specific actions that are supposed to be impossible.
The downside of this, however, is that players donāt get banned unless they log in and start cheating. Now that cheat communities and providers are aware of this, theyāll likely adapt. And thus, the battle continues.
Youāre reading Steamed, Kotakuās page dedicated to all things in and around Valveās wildly popular PC gaming service. Games, culture, community creations, criticism, guides, videosāeverything. If youāve found anything cool/awful on Steam, send us a message to let us know.