Krunker Aimbot with Yolov8 and Roboflow datasets! (www.slyautomation.com)
from slyuser@lemmy.ml to programming@programming.dev on 08 Sep 12:52
https://lemmy.ml/post/20069130

#programming

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lenninscjay@lemm.ee on 08 Sep 13:12 collapse

Ok, awesome for the programming practice/proof of concept but for gaming, I never understood the idea behind cheating.

Takes out half the fun of playing the game. You enjoy trolling people and harvesting the salt? Either get better or find a game that includes it as part of its core gameplay (ie eve online)

umami_wasbi@lemmy.ml on 08 Sep 16:05 next collapse

I’m interest at the eve part as I’m looking to join. Is cheating common?

EDIT: missed a word

lenninscjay@lemm.ee on 08 Sep 23:45 collapse

Eve online? In game Trolling/scamming is allowed and a completely valid gameplay, profit generating activity. The game is open ended so personality conflict and consensual/non-consensual PVP are the main activity drivers in the game.

Creating a python script to watch your screen and report intelligence to a third party out of game/recon tool? Probably completely within EULA and useful.

Creating a script that interacts with the client in any way (mouse clicks, packet sniffing etc.) is against Eula and will get you banned (considered cheating)

It’s a really unique game, worth a try. Nothing like it, not for everyone though. If you try it, try to spend no more than a week on your own in it. Then seek out other player groups in the game. It’s truly difficult to get by on your own in that game - and actually quite boring without the social aspect.

hector@sh.itjust.works on 09 Sep 06:40 collapse

Cheats are so interesting to make lol. I won’t lie, DLL hooking is passionating. I never used them in real matches though, I don’t see the point in that.

But programming-wise, cheats work in a interesting environment => kernel drivers

So there’s a lot of thing to experiment with to confuse Vanguard for instance