Have been playing TD since beta and like most would know its a mess at the moment in many aspects of the game. One aspect of the game especially the online section has been and still is effected by cheater's spoiling it for the genuine players. What are Ubisoft going to do about the possiblitiy of this game being spoilt by cheaters![]()
Godmode and similar ones would be the only ones that affect us. Maybe like hacks that warp people towards you and insta kill weapons.Originally Posted by DraxeI Go to original post
Exactly. Hacks don't only have to be things that let you see what you shouldn't or control the input of your game for you. They can also literally change the way the game operates, even for other people. Dark Souls III had a lot of these problems, not sure if it still does, I haven't played it in a month or so. The hacks in that game allowed the hacker insane things like Godmode, ability to fly, ability to cast as many spells and things as they wanted without loss of stamina or FP (which in For Honor could translate to endless Feats with no cooldown). They could also take advantage of exploits that allowed them to, on hit of another player, give that player effects from spells, lots of money or items. Not to mention the ability to teleport instantly to another player before they could disconnect and escape the hacker's wrath. Just a bunch of really terrible stuff that might bug or ruin their save, and also set off DS3's anti-cheat banning innocent players along with the hackers. It's a real terrible fate for a game.Originally Posted by coma987 Go to original post
Infinite Revenge, teleports (and not even to kill players, just teleporting to capture points), feats without cooldowns (infinite, spamable Arrow Storm, anyone?), etc.Originally Posted by coma987 Go to original post
Warping outside the map or other things that are prevalent in shooters don't really apply for a melee focused game, and could actually disadvantage a team, unless they warped under the floor of a point to make it perpetually contested.