A case of black hat hacking resulting in good outcomes for most people? Hate that those people who spent a lot of time and effort in the tournament get fucked, but (on its own, without the collateral damage) exposing the terrifying problems of giving that much access to a single executable is a good thing.
I really do not understand how server anti cheat is not way easier. I feel like devs are caught up on realtime anti cheat and not willing to do anything asynchronous. Or they really like paying licensing fees for client-side anticheat. I just don't understand how any competent software engineer or systems admin or architect trusts the client so fervently.
I don't think it has kernel anti cheat tho. Runs just fine on Linux without root permissions
Damn, getting downvoted for just stating my experience. It doesn't require kernel level access on Linux and runs fine—it's not a stretch to think it doesn't have kernel level anticheat (it doesn't on Linux, just on Windows).
How confusing will looking up "elixir mix Linux" be in web searches though 👀