[ON] Aimbot [ON] ESP [ON] WH

NARAKA: BLADEPOINT — public ban list from May 26, 2026

24 Entertainment dropped another public banhammer for NARAKA: BLADEPOINT — a May 26 list broken down by reason. How their anti-cheat model works, what going public means, and what players with software should keep in mind.

24 Entertainment keeps up its open-banhammer practice: on May 26 the NARAKA: BLADEPOINT Steam channel posted another Banned Players List — a public roster of blocked accounts broken down by reason. It’s a recognizable rhythm for the studio now — we’ve covered previous editions (May 13 and May 20). The fresh list continues the same line.

Why publish ban lists

Going public is a deliberate move by 24 Entertainment, with two goals:

  • Community pressure. Names/IDs in an open list work as a deterrent: the violator is visible to everyone.
  • Demonstrating anti-cheat activity. Regular lists reassure legit players that the developer hasn’t ignored the problem.

The lists consistently feature: cheat software (aimbot/ESP), scripts and macros, bug abuse, and less often toxic behavior.

How NARAKA’s anti-cheat works

NARAKA: BLADEPOINT is a melee battle-royale fighter with ranged elements, and its anti-cheat leans on server-side analytics plus client checks. A genre quirk: much comes down to parry timing and melee tracking, so aim-assist and parry scripts get caught not only by signatures but by anomalous match statistics.

From practice:

  • public aimbot and auto-parry scripts get detected fast — especially with glaring winrate anomalies;
  • manual memory edits are caught by client scans at startup;
  • disputed cases are finished off by manual review of replays/reports — hence the “wave”-shaped lists.

What to keep in mind if you run software on NARAKA

  • Regular public waves = regular detection. “It worked yesterday” means little on NARAKA: the list ships weekly.
  • Verified private solutions only, with confirmed activity in May 2026; public builds under an open banhammer don’t last.
  • An HWID spoofer is mandatory — public lists often come with device/hardware sanctions. Spoofer catalog.
  • Don’t draw attention with your stats — an unnatural winrate and perfect parries in killcams/replays invite reports and manual review.

Bottom line

NARAKA: BLADEPOINT stays on a maximally public anti-cheat course — the weekly open ban lists confirm it. For players with software the takeaway is the same as in past editions: filter suppliers hard, keep your spoofer current, and don’t flash anomalous stats. The full detection and software-type breakdown is in the NARAKA guide.

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