Battlefield 6 developers and publisher EA have outlined anti-cheat measures ahead of the game’s launch on October 10, but they warn cheating may remain a persistent problem at release. The team plans multiple technical and human countermeasures, yet staff admit the fight against hackers will likely continue.
Cheating has grown into a major headache across shooters, and it is in front of the Battlefield team. Titles such as Warzone and Apex Legends have long battled aimbots and wallhacks, and Battlefield 2042’s beta was hit badly by the same issue. That history shaped how the new team approached systems and staffing for the next entry. Players should expect visible effort rather than a perfect solution.
Christian Buhl of Battlefield Studios told IGN in an interview that Battlefield 6 will launch with a system called Javelin, which requires secure boot to run. Secure boot only allows trusted software at system start, raising the bar for many cheat tools. The team also established a dedicated squad of engineers and analysts focused on identifying suspicious activity and enforcing bans. EA has a company-wide anti-cheat group working with Battlefield to share intelligence and responses.
Despite that, the developers were blunt about limits. “Now, we can never win against cheaters. Cheaters will always be there. It’s a never-ending cat-and-mouse game,” he said. The comment underlines that technical barriers and active moderation reduce impact but do not eliminate the problem. Expect regular updates and active investigations rather than a one-time fix.
Buhl added cheating tends to be more common on PC than console, though crossplay means console players may still face PC-enabled cheats in mixed lobbies. The approach combines preventative tech and reactive enforcement to keep match quality acceptable. Teams will monitor exploits and issue bans as they appear. The goal is to limit disruption so matches remain playable.
Even with strong measures, the message is clear: cheating will not vanish, but the developer and publisher have put resources behind detection, prevention, and response to reduce its effect at launch and afterward.
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