

There's functionally very little difference in danger between a kernel driver that is open all the time and a service that loads a kernel driver at certain times. That's generally the case of days rather than weeks or (for something like VAC) months or years. What sets Vanguard apart is the speed at which cheaters are getting detected & banned by the AC. Basically, you'd have to render everyone's PC not their own. * not allowing memory to be read/changed at all all over the entire OSĪmong other things. * having an OS that will actually prevent said tampering first * giving everyone specific hardware that doesn't work if it is tampered with at all

That's because it's functionally not possible to prevent cheating in the first place without: In order for Valorant to be "effective" in the way you want (actually prevent cheating from occurring in the first place) it would have to be infinitely more invasive than it is currently, to a degree that is fundamentally impossible without worldwide government support and a complete change to how people are allowed to use their computers. I don't think you understand how AC works.ĪC is reactive, not proactive.
