@@サイバー狼 no one says they can't run/start the anti cheat that is used is on newer cods will not work at this time. Older cods in like bo3 don't have the same type of anti cheat. Also a lot of cods began splitting multiplayer and campaign for some time now. So anti cheat may not be needed if there is no account incentive like zombies
I've been playing Stardew Valley on my steam deck with the new nexus mod manager built for it, and haven't had a single crash with over 20 mods even though it's in very early development. Just thought I'd let the cozy gamers know 💜
@@bm-cy7ek If it's true there's steam deck support from the devs then clearly there is... I don't use mod managers myself but that doesn't mean I feel the need to diss anybody else who decides to use them.
@@arturbier it’s become garbage bloat spyware that you don’t have control of, gotta go through a bunch of hoops just to clean the OS of junk and even then ur not in the clear, with this new mainstream of monetizing everything more and more alongside AI features, and they can get away with it cuz there’s no competition till recently, it’s almost time to abandon ship for a good chunk of users.
destiny 2 can be a problem even if works on steam deck the dev's can turn it on tomorrow but the dev's anti linux they even go out their way to really ban people if they try get to play it, it's maybe why is doing so poorly as a company to self center thinking
Realistically, anything that runs solely client-side can be defeated. Move the detection component to the server-side, and base it on behavioral analysis to filter out human-like vs. bot-like behavior. Without needing a monitoring component on the client side, we can move on to my next suggestion.... Instead of having an untrustworthy kernel module, games should require that the entire boot chain, firmware to loader to kernel to modules, be signed by trusted parties, with nothing untrusted loaded. This would be a pretty radical shift in how games are deployed; they'd probably be containers. Finally, publishers should accept that a lot of what I just described is overkill. Do it for cases where cheating has serious impacts on the integrity of an event, or sales of a game as a whole. The rest of the time, just accept that some cheating is going to happen.
Enough with the insults. But Microsoft themselves are factually known to embed code to make it hard on competitors. Windows has proven code to make wordperfect crash. A lot of microsoft application had code that would make the application behave erratically in a way that could be blamed on competitor "OS's". Microsoft themselves are the prime example of foul players. And you are correct that microsoft will probably make an API that still would work anticompetitive. Linux already has a several "anti-cheat" kernel level system that can interact with third party additions. It's called security enhanced, and it provides mandatory access control. You can combine this with verity to checksum binaries to be the ones you require. In a sense, for a long time anti cheat can work a lot better on linux than on windows, because Linux has a working security API. Windows has absolutely nothing. It's just that companies want to have a product that they can sell. It's hard to sell something for a product that hasn't been broken from the start. There are whole industries around windows because windows is an incapable OS and needs a lot of plugins and patches to make it even the slightest usable.
"I can't make sure people don't cheat in/copy my thing. Lets build/use a program that drills down past all safeties and can potentially brick the world. Whats the worst that can happen?" I swear, that line about making foolproof things just breeds better fools is sadly right.
I'm in a "need a powerful little box" situation and wonder how long I should sit on my laurels and wait for a Steamdeck 2 if I don't buy a 780m powered box from minisforum. Have a nice weekend yall.
Last time I tried the Non Steam Launchers it erased all my Non Steam Games. All my emulated games also. I found the files in Desktop mode. But in gaming mode they disappeared.
I still remember one of those kernel-level copy protection programs (I think it was securom for Splinter Cell 3) messing up my windows so bad I had to reinstall it entirely. And right now it's what is preventing me from getting Helldivers 2. Anti-cheat for a co-op game, why does anyone even need that?
The CrowdStrike thing was not a Microsoft problem, it was a CrowdStrike problem. Microsoft releases all updates via their preview program and as well as a partner with Microsoft, to test updates with their software before it's globally released. This is CrowdStrike's IT team who tests that didn't fully test before releasing... It will be nice to have COD on SteamOS without needing to dual boot, the fact is Windows would not be going anywhere as I still have Game Pass games that I do like to play on the road sometimes, if I get them in Steam, I need to buy them again, not going to happen. And MW3 MP runs around 60fps, very poor on a SD card (tested this, was getting around 20fps) but, on the internal SSD runs easy 60fps with some tweaks...
The First Descendant uses Easy Anti Cheat, and I keep getting disconnected at random intervals of playtime. I have a theory that this is due EAC because the game itself runs fine on the deck, I just get thrown into the main menu with a disconnection message (and it says Error NE:1000), so my question is... is EAC a Kernel level anti cheat?.
I don't play any games that need kernel level anti-cheat, but I do hate the idea of it and I hope the industry moves away from it. It would be nice to play Rust again. It used to run on Linux natively like 8 years ago, but they removed the port and since then they've used anti-cheat as an excuse for not bringing support back. I think you can play on servers with no anti-cheat enabled, like if you host your own, but there's no proper singleplayer and any official server is gonna have the anti-cheat, so for most people it's entirely unplayable.
kernel level anticheat is extremely bad, so everyone should be happy if they go away and also it makes it _almost_ imposible to support on linux but for non-kernel anticheat it is still not completelly automatic automatic support. They still can detect the runtime is not windows and it is easy to support by just adding proton runtime as acceptable but the developers still have to do this. It is a very easy thing to do. often just checking a box but since they have to do it the anticheat problem will not completely go away.
Ive been playing the hell out of valorant since it came to console, i hope i can play on my deck one day. Also titanfall is really fun on it, its on sale for 3 dollars so i got it
Kicking out kernel level anti-cheats would be wonderful, alas that's not something normally installed on Business devices, so Microsoft might just give 'em all a green light.
Thanks for making content and NOT following the "how to be a cool youtuber!!!" handbook.....no stupid zooms, jump cuts, over the top energy, wacky graphics, way too long intros, over affected broadcasting voice, over the top studio/production....just talking to us like a normal person, great production values and just easy to watch and listen. Thanks!
INSTALL NON STEAM LAUNCHER but! Installed non steam and epic launcher and installed Zenless Zero. Yes it plays but in 2024 verse when the PS vita was jail broke we get so many updates to the games all the time that when I wanted to play I could not. Yes you can play non steam games, I do think it is still a little clunky! the installing took a long time even with a high speed wifi! THE PROBLEM the games is always needing a update and the the updates take along time. The second problem is not just installing its finding the file to uninstall? I think the non steam launcher is a good direction but I believe it could and needs to be smoother. In the end left the non steam launcher installed waiting for it to improve. My suggestion if you do this test a install and a unistall:)
Please God let Fortnite and CoD work on Linux 🙏 also WAIT SO THAT'S WHY MY ENTIRE FUCK ASS COMPUTER BLUE SCREENED CAUSE FORTNITE'S ANTICHEAT FAILED TO START
well shit. 13 minutes into this video i realized i didn't pay attention to a single word because i was dealing with steam support. crapping all over the poor dude on support duty because NO FUCKING CONTROLLER EVER works properly with the steam deck. so i bought their overpriced shitty dock for nothing because i cannot dock it, because no controller works...
Yeah it's not a good thing for cheating though. It's great that this could push anti cheats to be more creative with their approach but it objectively makes cheating easier which isn't a good trade off. If you're playing call of duty as your most competitive game and complaining about anti cheat i think your opinion is a lot less valuable versus actual hardcore games that need this feature ex(cs2, valorant, tarkov, etc). Additionally call of duty can't even run well on the steam deck and with cs2 What might happen from this push from mc since we're hypothesizing is they might even lock down other apps further, like your dailies you might use. Signed certificates and memory protection on can hurt devs and also cheaters
Microsoft won't lock apps out of the kernel. They will put control measures in place to prevent making changes on kernel level. Don't get your hopes up.
If you think Microsoft locking the kernel with stop kernel level anti cheat and they make something more universal that can work on Linux and Windows then you really are a man child. They will do something on the Windows side when winging away from kernel level anti cheat but you best believe some publishers will do everything in their power to make it as broken as possible to ever run on Linux(looking at you EA). I wouldn't be surprised when you boot it up on Linux and it flag you for using that OS and permanently ban you. If I'm not mistaken, wasn't Bungie doing just that with Destiny 2 2 and a half years ago when booting from the Deck?
the man child bit is a bit out of pocket, but yeah they will perma ban you for trying to boot the game on Linux No way and I’m trying ANYTHING that might make it work on Linux before bungie gives a go ahead
@@toobiasj Cool. Could care less what you think. Just trying to say that anyone that believes that are childish in thinking this would stop publishers from being shady with spyware kernel anti cheat. Maybe you're offended because you are a man child and it stuck something in you that made you upset. Go grab a bowl of ice cream for some nom noms and a blanky and sit down for some cartoon time and feel better ok. 😁
@@WhiteInk47that is stretching the truth. They said attempting to BYPASS the anticheat would result in a ban, not simply booting in SteamOS. It simply won't run.
@@CobaltChris They made it very clear if you get into the game on linux you will be banned. Yeah it might just not work, but I'm not even doing that until they approve it.
I was getting ready to sell my SD oled to get a legion go due to not being able to run "anti-cheat" games. Wonder how fast this will happen. doubt before this weekend though. Sad because I finally installed windows 11 on a separate external nvme just to try mw3 on my oled to see the performance. I was shocked that after tweaking some settings, I was averaging 75-80 fps while maintaining decent quality. I love steamos and valve and my SD oled, But I've put up with not having the drivers from valve long enough to want to switch. I have 3 tb. Either give us the drivers and let us dual boot, or get anti-cheat fixed valve. I'm over this. And before you say this isn't Valve's fault, not even giving us the option to windeck shows they aren't on our (the gamers') side. They are forcing oled owners to stay on the steamos platform for the sake of hopefully getting more sales. Sad to say, but Valve is turning into Apple.
what di you mean with gove the drivers. you mean code the drivers, and than publish them? windeck would cost more, because they need to get Microsofts permission, and oay for windows licenses. also, if there would be windows, there are many things, where valve couldn't do much.
@@schwingedeshaehers funny, because the lcd version has the drivers. I know because I used to have one and my son still has one. They saw a huge loss in sales after they released the drivers, and decided to hold back on the oled. Because I highly doubt this is a money issue due to them being a multi billion dollar company. And it isn't good business practice to advertise as being open to any os, and then not releasing the drivers. Kind of false advertising if you ask me.
It's not Windows is saint either, they say I have throw away my desktop that is almost 10 years old cause they will no longer support Win10 sometime in 2025, and I don't have the chip to win11. You can get win11 to work no guarantee it won't mess up though in unofficial ways and I wasn't happy with steam either about Windows os not being officially supported. All are these companies crap just gain and agenda to them.