Call of Duty's latest anti-cheating efforts will see cheaters hallucinate players in online matches.
Yesterday on June 29, Activision's Team Ricochet anti-cheating taskforce shared an update on their efforts to combat disingenuous players. At some point in the near future, identified cheaters will start hallucinating players who aren't really there in online games.
#TeamRICOCHET is thrilled to share with the community several updates to RICOCHET including the Hallucination decoy and In-Game Reporting, live in Call of Duty #Warzone and #MWIIRICOCHET Anti-Cheat Report 👉 https://t.co/LdE2ouEvTb pic.twitter.com/j8YLY0kBYDJune 29, 2023
The hallucinations aren't visible to any other players in the game, thankfully, or that'd sort of defeat the whole point. These new creations are based on player-generated data from others in that same match, so the hallucinations hopefully look and act just like actual players, enough to fool the cheaters.
Call of Duty's Team Ricochet can place a hallucination near a player they suspect of cheating at any point. If the cheater reacts to the hallucination, they've basically copped to being a cheater in front of the anti-cheating taskforce, and can probably expect a swift ban.
It's really important to remember that genuine players can't interact with, or see, the hallucinations. Nothing about the new creation from Team Ricochet can impact a genuine player's experience or gameplay, and here's hoping that pledge from the developers proves true at launch.
This all comes after developer Treyarch admitted earlier this year in April that anti-cheat progress "may not be enough for players." The admission was well before this new effort was ever disclosed to the player base, so we can only hope the hallucinations have given the anti-cheat efforts the shot in the arm it needs.
Activision announced earlier this month that the original Warzone would be shutting down later this year, and players are up in arms over the decision.