Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-09-27 19:27:44| Engadget

Valve is continuing the wonderful tradition of messing with people who feel the need to cheat in multiplayer games. In the latest update to Deadlock, the company's wildly popular new hero shooter that's currently invite-only, Valve added the game's first anti-cheat system. When the system detects a cheater, Deadlock will offer the opposing team a choice. They can have the rulebreaker banned immediately and end the match right away. Behind door number two is the option to transform the cheater into a frog for the rest of the game. Valve will ban them afterwards. Valve will roll out this approach to bans over the next day or so. The results of affected matches won't count for the other players in the lobby. This is what cheaters will look like if you turn them into a frog using the new anti-cheat pic.twitter.com/ECVx7uQAud Deadlock Intel (@IntelDeadlock) September 26, 2024 It's a very funny approach to tackling an all-too-common problem. Activision has also tried a number of approaches to embarrass Call of Duty cheaters, from cutting the parachutes of detected violators who drop into Warzone to taking their guns away. Banning cheaters is important, but why not have some fun at their expense first?This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/pc/valves-deadlock-lets-you-turn-cheaters-into-frogs-172744142.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

23.02Anthropic accuses three Chinese AI labs of abusing Claude to improve their own models
23.02Summer Game Fest runs from June 5-8
23.02Bungie says 'no second chances' if you're caught cheating in Marathon
23.02Nothing reveals the Phone 4a ahead of schedule
23.02Ball x Pit will land on iOS and Android on March 12
23.02Lamborghini ditches plans for its all-electric supercar due to 'close to zero' buyer interest
23.02A new Evangelion series is coming from Studio Khara and Yoko Taro, creator of NieR
23.02The creators of Dark Sky have a new weather app
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

24.02FedEx sues for Trump tariff refund
24.02D-Street up on bank, auto boost amid caution ahead of F&O expiry
24.02Orbital space race heats up in Arctic north
24.02Price targets, ratings of big IT companies cut on 'downside risks'
24.02Chocolate kept in anti-theft boxes as retailers warn it's being stolen to order
24.02Global ETF craze has retail buyers paying steep premiums
24.02Chicago Park District pushes $630M plan to revamp Soldier Field post-Bears
23.02How to Profit from Activist Investor Campaigns: The Elliott/LSEG Playbook
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .