Here we go again. One game I was excited about was the upcoming Mecha BREAK, which currently has a playtest demo on Steam but they've added in anti-cheat.
Eh? I don’t understand. Either it works on Linux, or it doesn’t. Seems like the author just doesn’t know how to troubleshoot some compatibility issue on whatever desktop Linux distro they’re using.
ACE (Anti-Cheat Expert) seems to work only on the Steam Deck, but doesn’t let you play on any other hardware running Linux. Delta Force has the same issue
But how is it checking the hardware, I have more permissions than the game on my machine, I can very easily make it believe it’s running in a Deck unless it tries to use specific instructions that my hardware doesn’t have (which I highly doubt)
Well, valve and AMD have worked together on this. Apart from that, steam is a DRM platform and there is a lot of tracking going on all the time (also during login) and in games. I don’t know what the rights look like anymore, because there was a change at steam once, but steam itself should still have root/system rights somehow. In other words, it wouldn’t be a problem that anti-cheat solutions could act outside of their prefix. Maybe valve is trying to get publishers to support them with a platform they can trust. (Of course i could be complete wrong)
Eh? I don’t understand. Either it works on Linux, or it doesn’t. Seems like the author just doesn’t know how to troubleshoot some compatibility issue on whatever desktop Linux distro they’re using.
ACE (Anti-Cheat Expert) seems to work only on the Steam Deck, but doesn’t let you play on any other hardware running Linux. Delta Force has the same issue
How does it know you’re on the deck? I gave a gut feeling that that should be easily bypassable.
Maybe the Hardware? Easiest identifier for the deck would be the same hardware in any deck.
The question is whether the publisher will then press the brakes and generally deactivate linux support in the event of a bypass.
But how is it checking the hardware, I have more permissions than the game on my machine, I can very easily make it believe it’s running in a Deck unless it tries to use specific instructions that my hardware doesn’t have (which I highly doubt)
Well, valve and AMD have worked together on this. Apart from that, steam is a DRM platform and there is a lot of tracking going on all the time (also during login) and in games. I don’t know what the rights look like anymore, because there was a change at steam once, but steam itself should still have root/system rights somehow. In other words, it wouldn’t be a problem that anti-cheat solutions could act outside of their prefix. Maybe valve is trying to get publishers to support them with a platform they can trust. (Of course i could be complete wrong)
Gameindustry. Good stuff against tracking.