New to cheats? Map software types, anti-cheat families, status labels, budget bands, and a checklist before you pay.

See also: how cheats work · anti-cheats · safe usage · HWID spoofers · DMA hardware.

What to Consider First

Know your exact game and platform, its anti-cheat, and whether you need ESP-only intel or a full internal. Builds rarely transfer between titles. Plan subscription cost, optional DMA hardware, and a HWID spoofer if you must clean fingerprints after bans. Updates and honest status matter as much as features.

Types of Cheats Explained

Internal

Injects into the game process, enabling full kits (ESP, aimbot, extras) at medium risk because foreign code lives inside the protected client.

External

Runs outside the game, usually ESP overlays or radar-style data. Often safer than blatant internals, still exposed to drivers, signatures, and behavior checks.

DMA

Hardware DMA plus commonly a second PC keeps cheat logic off the gaming OS — strongest practical safety for many ACs, steep buy-in. Read DMA guide.

Macros

No memory access; automate recoil via inputs. Lowest relative risk when tuned humanly; some ecosystems still ban macro ecosystems.

Spoofers

HWID masking, not combat features. See HWID spoofer primer and spoofer catalog.

Understanding Anti-Cheats

EAC

Easy Anti-Cheat on Fortnite, Apex, Rust, EFT Arena — kernel components and frequent integrity updates.

BattlEye

Powers EFT, R6S, PUBG, DayZ, Arma; aggressive client work plus server-side heuristics in many games.

Ricochet

Covers Call of Duty with mixed client/server telemetry that rotates each season.

Vanguard

Valorant kernel driver — most aggressive mainstream stack; obvious play gets punished quickly.

VAC

Protects CS2; feels quiet until ban waves land — stay low-key even when lobbies look clean.

Safety Levels Explained

  • Undetected — “not publicly busted today,” not a lifetime guarantee; patches reset the clock.
  • Detected — confirmed unsafe; using it is beginner self-sabotage.
  • Updating — offline while devs rebuild; never force stale loaders.

Match status to patch, region, storefront — mismatches fake safety.

Budget Guide

  • $5–15/mo: macros, cheap externals, ESP-only deals.
  • $15–30/mo: standard internals with ESP + aimbot + upkeep.
  • $30–50/mo: premium internals or costly AC maintenance.
  • $400+ upfront: DMA hardware + licenses — plan via DMA guide.

Step-by-Step Decision Framework

  1. Game ID — title, launcher, ranked/casual.
  2. AC profile — EAC, BattlEye, Ricochet, Vanguard, VAC, or mixes.
  3. Feature scope — intel-only vs full combat; heavier kits raise reports.
  4. Budget — subs, spoofers, DMA if needed.
  5. Status — undetected for your build only.
  6. Research — footage, configs, then buy.

Common Beginner Mistakes

  • Trusting 100% safe slogans.
  • Rage configs that spike player reports.
  • Skipping HWID education while stacking accounts.
  • Wrong SKU / region / version.
  • Ignoring natural movement — cheats surface bad habits instantly.

Conclusion

Match game + AC + features + budget. Use internals for power, externals/macros for lighter touch, DMA when hardware isolation pays off, spoofers when HWIDs matter. Browse the IVSOFTE catalog.

Open the catalog — filter by game, match price to your risk bar. Go to main catalog →