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submitted 1 day ago by shapis@lemmy.ml to c/linux@lemmy.ml

Basically the title. I’ve only ever seen huge 20 page guides on how to make it work. Is there an easy way?

Specifically on Debian or Arch with a laptop with two gpus (zephyrus g14)

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[-] nanook@friendica.eskimo.com 1 points 16 hours ago

@Ptsf @shapis I've primarily gamed from a virtual machine and have NEVER EVER been banned, so I don't think so.

[-] Ptsf@lemmy.world 3 points 16 hours ago* (last edited 16 hours ago)

Depends on the game. Apex, Riot, ubisoft, and EA all ban vm players. A list of other companies do as well.

[-] nanook@friendica.eskimo.com 1 points 14 hours ago

@Ptsf Haven't played any of those. Anyway, there is a way to edit your xml to fake the machine id.

[-] brian@programming.dev 2 points 13 hours ago

machine id isn't necessarily the important part. anticheat and vm detection check a lot of different heuristics incl hard to defend against things like timing attacks on particular cpu instructions. there's a handful of open source versions if you're curious

[-] nanook@friendica.eskimo.com 0 points 13 hours ago

@brian To be honest, until and unless it becomes a problem for me, not really. KVM has the host CPU executing the VM instructions so timing on CPU instructions should product identical results. I have the VM setup as CPU and GPU pass through.

[-] brian@programming.dev 1 points 13 hours ago

even with cpu passthrough some things are still emulated. you can run a vm detector and see for yourself what tests fail.

it may not affect your games but others should still be careful since it is a real issue, and people do get banned for it.

[-] nanook@friendica.eskimo.com 1 points 13 hours ago

@brian Ok, just for kicks tell me where I can get this.

[-] brian@programming.dev 1 points 2 hours ago

I've never used it but this one seems like the most complete currently, and it'll tell you which tests fail.

this post was submitted on 13 Nov 2024
48 points (96.2% liked)

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