Riot Games is making an anti-cheat change that could be rough on older PCs
a day ago
- #Anti-Cheat
- #PC Gaming
- #Security
- Most competitive PC multiplayer games use kernel-level anti-cheat software with elevated privileges.
- Anti-cheat software now requires Windows security features like Secure Boot, TPM 2.0, and virtualization-based memory integrity.
- Riot Games (Valorant, League of Legends) is implementing a new BIOS update requirement due to a UEFI bug.
- The bug affects the IOMMU on some UEFI-based motherboards, allowing DMA protection to be bypassed during boot.
- Patches (CVE-2025-11901, CVE-2025‑14302, CVE-2025-14303, CVE-2025-14304) fix the DMA protection vulnerability.
- Riot will enforce BIOS updates only for 'restricted' Valorant players whose systems resemble cheaters' setups.