"Call of Duty" brings in a new feature for its "Ricochet" anti-cheating software that will protect users from cheaters that try to use hacks in real-time while playing the game. The new "Damage Shield" is now available via "God Mode" for users to use and what it will do is block the bullets coming from cheaters to prevent them from killing a real gamer.
'Call of Duty' Ricochet: Damage Shield to Protect Gamers in 'God Mode'
"Call of Duty" will no longer sit idly to the many cheating procedures done in its game as it brings the Ricochet software to greater heights with its improvement. According to "Call of Duty's" blog post, the game brings an update for its Ricochet that features a "Damage Shield" that acts as a protective layer to avoid getting hit with a cheater's bullet.
The feature is available in "God Mode," and it gives gamers a chance to thrive in a game despite the many cheaters lurking around the match.
Cheaters getting banned will only create new accounts and continue their actions. So what "Call of Duty" did is bring features that will spoil their dishonest parade in the game and prevent them from enjoying the game with their fraudulent acts.
'Call of Duty': Zero Tolerance for Cheaters, Love for Honest Gamers
TimTheTatman demonstrated the new Damage Shield on his recent game vlog post in the "COD" update that went live earlier. The game developers are enforcing a strict zero-tolerance from these tricksters and cheaters. "COD" shows their love for the honest gamers who continue to play the game with nothing but their skills and wits to win the firefight.
'Call of Duty': Cheat Problem in Game
"Call of Duty" maker Activision Blizzard is now over at Microsoft's Xbox after its acquisition, and it will continue as it was to bring its popular action shooter game to the public. However, in its transition, the game experienced a massive cheating problem that affected the game significantly, with the company intent on removing them from the platform.
Since then, Activision launched "Ricochet," its anti-cheating system that not only detects cheaters and bans them from the game but lets them play the current match and avoid inflicting damage to gamers.
"COD" also enforces several safeguards to its anti-cheating software that now looks into the invisible skins it previously launched, particularly those that use restricted map spots.
Activision Blizzard has zero tolerance for cheating, and this is because many honest gamers that only want to blow off steam gets affected by the hackers that use aimbots and the like to win the game.
Now, its Ricochet system is actively bringing new features to protect its regular gamers from thriving against the dishonest ones instead of merely identifying them and banning them from the title.
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Written by Isaiah Richard