Escape From Tarkov has had problems with cheaters pretty much from the start, but despite being vocal about its efforts to rid the game of their influence—and occasionally referring to cheaters as "scum of the Earth"—some players aren't convinced that developer Battlestate Games is all that serious about dealing with the problem. A new anti-cheat effort rolled out in the latest patch might change some minds on that front: The studio is now offering «compensation for reporting players who violated game rules»—in other words, a bounty on cheaters.
«Players will receive in-game currency compensation after the report that led to the blocking of the violator,» the 0.14.9.5 patch notes say (via GamesRadar). «Compensation comes with an in-game message informing of a successful report. Compensation for several successful reports will be combined.»
It's light on detail—there's no word as to how much players will be paid for a successful report, whether any kind of threshold has to be met before payout occurs, or how reports from multiple people about the same cheater will be handled—and of course the value of an uptick in cheater reports is dependent entirely on what Battlestate does with them. Still, it seems like a step in the right direction, although whether the program has any long-term impact on cheating remains to be seen.
This isn't exactly an original idea. At least one redditor suggested Battlestate implement a bounty program like this more than a year ago, noting that Yager offered a very similar program in The Cycle: Frontier. The reaction to that suggestion was mixed, as they say; the general consensus seemed to be that even if the plan was workable, Battlestate was either incapable or unwilling to make it happen. Now that it's embraced the bounty scheme, we can only hope it works out better than it did for Yager. The Cycle: Frontier was shuttered in September 2023, in part because of the negative impact of cheaters.
Despite widespread frustration with
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