Watch Out! Battlefield 2042 Cheats Already Sold Online

Jakarta - The newest title in the long-standing Battlefield series is set to launch in October 2021, and hackers are already selling exploits for the unreleased multiplayer shooter. A website advertises cheats, including aimbots, radars, and wallhacks for Battlefield 2024, despite the fact the game is more than a month from release.

Also, the only official game testing so far was done with a very limited number of select players, who were given around 18 hours of testing to understand and provide feedback on the new title.

The website, discovered by CharlieIntel, appears to offer an undetected hack for Battlefield 2042.

The website (hosting cheats) also claims to have over 1.2 million subscribers, none of which have been caught using the cheats available from this site.

Furthermore, the scammers claim to be able to update their hack "which both new patches come out of the developer."

This battlefield game does have a long history of cheating. The latest version of the game has been filled with online cheats, destroying every fair game opportunity with competitors of the same skill level.

Makeofuse has even seen professional players cheat at the highest levels of the competition, with cheaters being exposed several times in high-level Battlefield tournaments.

That's not to say that Battlefield is the only top FPS title affected by cheating. Call of Duty, CS:GO, Fortnite, and all other professional-level first-person shooters suffer from cheating from time to time.

The biggest difference in this case is that for Battlefield 2042, it turns out that the cheat is already available, and there is no way to stop the cheat. Game-breaking cheats already exist, so multiplayer games in Battlefield 2042 may be broken.

EA relies on game lovers to buy the latest Battlefield. There is little doubt that Battlefield 2042 will be an excellent game with a large following.

But as long as rampant cheating gets out of hand and companies like EA and Activision fail to address the actual issues affecting their games, like cheating and hacking at all levels, then surely no one will take it seriously.

Of course we already know that the above situation is a fake. No matter how many cheats and hacks EA eradicates from Battlefield, crackers will always find other ways to get around those restrictions.

The development of game cheats has always been like this. Cheat codes and cheat drives existed long before the internet.

The only difference now is that someone cheating in your lobby in your favorite FPS can be the difference between you reaching the Battlefield multiplayer finals and someone else taking the dive and compromising their integrity.