Player Battlefields Unknown it's a popular game, and with that attention comes something else – cooks. The mobile version of the battlefield is packed especially with hackers, resulting in thousands of blockages every day. To combat that situation better, Tencent Games and PUBG Corp. let us introduce something called Project Ban Pan, and the video on it tells us how this studio catches the counterfeiters.
The trailer is quite intriguing, but it's worth watching because it's based on a real situation, Tencent said in a news release. Initially, PUBG Corp. it received various reports from the player, but when they looked at his gameplay, everything seemed fine. It wasn't until the engineer looked closely at what was happening near the end of the player's game that he realized something was wrong.
Apparently, the impostor was not using a special tool or anything like that. Instead, they used two standard mobile devices. One phone was used to start and play most of the game. Midway through, the cheater was just getting in second by telephone, and in doing so, would mislead the program into believing that you are experiencing communication problems. This will create an opening that allows the player to easily kill opponents. Fortunately, however, the impostor was arrested, and is now prohibited from playing the game for the next 10 years.
"About 95% of the violations are punished by actual prohibition by the security system, while players can report any allegations of creating a large database, which also helps impose penalties offline," Tencent reports. "Without the game, PUBG Mobile
Project Ban Pan has also launched a live performance of Rep Replay on March 3, which will allow fans to see how they were executed in the opponent's opinion. It is hoped that by providing this tool, players will be able to better see if the trick was allowed.
According to the studio, it said reports had deteriorated recently due to new anti-fraud measures.
"At the moment, about 8,000 accounts have been blocked for 10 years every day," the release said.