Riot Games has begun blocking Valorant players who have not updated their motherboard BIOS after identifying a firmware-level vulnerability that allows cheating software to bypass the game’s ...
Processors Intel says its graphics drivers are now 'light years ahead of where we were a few years ago', and they'll need to be if it's going to tempt gamers towards its new iGPUs FPS Rainbow Six ...
If you have an Asus, Gigabyte, MSI, or ASRock motherboard, you need to update the BIOS if you want to continue playing Valorant. That's because a critical flaw was recently found that allows cheaters ...
These anti-cheat protections are a real pain: not only they boil down to rootkits that give far too much control on a third part software, but they are a pain to satisfy (it took me a whole afternoon ...
If you don’t see the option, hop into your BIOS and enable Virtualization, it’s usually called Intel VT-x or AMD-V. Still no luck? Try uninstalling and reinstalling Vanguard from the Riot Client, ...
Everything you need to know about Valorant's "Vanguard Out of Compliance" error and how to fix it (Image via Riot Games) The "Vanguard Out of Compliance" error in ...
Riot Games is asking some gamers who want to play Valorant to update their BIOS as part of anti-cheat measures. To help thwart memory exploits cheaters have discovered, Valorant now requires some of ...
In context: Reports from users trying out Windows 11 are starting to indicate that the anti-cheat software in Riot Games' competitive first-person shooter requires secure boot and Trusted Platform ...
I do not wish to play any game made by Riot games, nor ever do any form of business with them at all. Thankfully, I am under no obligation to give Riot games money, and they cannot force me to do so.