Right but we’re talking about 100s of ms of human reaction time (faster reaction time sis around 200ms for ultra pros). Wall hacks where you only get 400ms of warning aren’t much good. So they absolutely could do something with it.
Comment on Kernel Anti-Cheat Is an Overreach
Alberat@lemmy.world 18 hours agoit’s for speed. if I tell you they’re out of sight now, but will be visible in 50ms, it’ll be faster than waiting 50ms to recv their new position that’s visible and waiting on network latency which could be another 50ms in addition
echodot@feddit.uk 18 hours ago
Object@sh.itjust.works 1 hour ago
They can see each other though, which means one player may get information about the enemy 100ms ahead of another. That would be quite an advantage in a lot of games, especially in Rainbow 6 Siege where TTK is super short.
LwL@lemmy.world 2 hours ago
100ms more is absolutely enough to be massive because it just subtracts from however long you need to recognize the other player after they become visible. Not to mention that in slower paced shooters, people might just remain stationary near a corner for very long, and you can’t magically know when they start to move. Also in games where you can die with one well placed shot it could be 10ms and still be a significant advantage because you just need to be faster than your opponent.
Afaik valorant does try to not send any info that won’t be needed, that doesn’t mean it’s immune to wallhacks, it just limits their effectiveness.
stom@lemmy.world 15 hours ago
Cool I’m an ULTRA PRO and i’ve been drinking for a good chunk of today
Sir_Thominick_IV@lemmy.world 17 hours ago
I’ve been working on a PvP game for the last few months.
Visibility checks aren’t needed in all cases. Most RTS/2D/2.5D games don’t have this problem, or it is minimal.
For games that do need them, they tend to be AAA FPS, which have the budget to make simple changes like lag compensation.