Quote:
Originally Posted by lordgodd
Oh gosh yet another post about dma and firmware. Here's what @ had to say about clutch solutions "Clutch banks off semi-spoofed shared firmware and hardware" which I agree 100%. What I have to say is there are plenty of advertisements publicly for dma and firmware but they are ready to take your money and run. Rather build private connections.
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To preface, I realize this thread is a few weeks old. But the situation hasn't improved in years, and will continue to remain the same for many more to come.
As for @
, I haven't been on the site in a while but happy to see people still quoting some of my rants.
To those looking to cheat on Faceit, you are taking a shot in the dark every time you buy a cheat. Honestly this applies to just about every cheat you buy on this site. And no I don't mean in the "there's always a risk" sort of way. I mean half of the listings and their claim's are unsubstantiated, and you're buying a product that's been passed around and rebranded more than a Toyota Tacoma in Afghanistan.
I'm far removed from working on counter-strike, but I assure you things haven't changed since ESEA's update in 2015. "League-Cheat" nowadays means it supports anti-cheats like CEVO, ones that don't exist anymore, ones that only pad their "Supported AC" list. It's a joke.
Lastly, here is a perspective from both a player and a developer.
At one point, I was a decent player with a league cheat.
This did nothing for me, and never would have done anything for me.
You aren't going to be a professional, you aren't going to win anything.
Also, you're probably going to get your personal cheat build exposed or reviewed if you genuinely depend on any hard feature.
At another point, I was a developer with a league cheat.
But who would I be selling it to exactly? I wouldn't exactly sell it to the average player. Unless I'm genuinely keeping up with Faceit everyday, and attacking the anti-cheat directly and successfully, then I have to be careful about who I'm selling it to.
So ideally, you'd only sell to players who are actually good at the game. And you wouldn't give those players an aimbot. A good player is only going to get messed up by an aimbot, and a bad player is only going to get caught.
But even for those hundreds of US players who do have faceit cheats, most of them aren't going anywhere special.
In summary, there's really not a market for Faceit cheats.
I understand the casual cheater might not believe so, but it's true.
So, that's my yearly rant on the state of the cheat market.
TLDR:
If you think you have a self-made cheat, you probably don't.
If you think you're good enough for a personal build, you probably aren't.
If you think your developer is good enough, he probably isn't.
These are all just statistically of course, so don't take it personally.