Skip Navigation

InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)CO
Posts
0
Comments
481
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Thats crazy you experience this. I have like 1500 hours in SoT, and it's Rare (pun intended) to even hear other crews use voice chat. I can't remember the last time someone was toxic. My only gripe is their servers suck sooooooooo much ass, I legit don't think they have a single employee that knows how fix it.

    Do you do open crew?

  • Essentially, most cheats for games work because the program can access the RAM addresses that the game uses. Anticheat works by scanning the computer for these running programs/services that are known to be cheats.

    Historically this has been done in userspace, ie. no elevated permissions. Nowadays, Kernel level AC let's the AC check for deeper cheating methods, like devices that are operating on a driver level.

    Currently, the most difficult to detect method is cheating using a 2nd PC that connects via a cable to a special PCIe device in the gaming PC. It essentially analyzes everything going to RAM and plucks out game related info. It's currently a back and forth trying to hide that PCIe device from the anti-cheat.

  • Get Unraid for your server OS. Its nuts how good it is at being beginner friendly, while being robust when needed. It has a docker app "store", as well as plugins, and a virtual machine manager as well. It also has a very, very nice Web GUI: you manage the server from another PC you use in your house.

    I can not overstate how much I learned by starting with Unraid.

  • Unraid is the bee's knees, especially for being beginner friendly. You use the internet browser of another computer on the same network to access the web GUI of the server.

    Most game servers, Palworld included, have ready to go templates in their "App Store," for running the servers as Docker containers.

  • I've done a decent amount of Distro hopping with an all team red PC, and CachyOS is fantastic. I recommend Bazzite for people who want no bullshit, OOTB experience. But if you don't mind minor tinkering, CachyOS is just too good at what it accomplishes. Their gaming meta package, which has custom wine & proton builds, is is such an easy way to milk out that last bit of performance. Their kernel manager and Firefox fork are also just so well done. Not to mention they're ahead of the game for things like the upcoming NTSYNC in Linux 6.14. Last but not least their default Cachy kernel is the cherry on top.