Warzone, Black Ops 7, and seasonal CoD releases use Ricochet Anti-Cheat — a kernel driver monitoring processes, drivers, and memory on the game PC. DMA is discussed as a way to run cheat logic on a second machine while reading RAM over PCIe. This page covers Ricochet context, where to look for CoD listings, hardware needs, and DMA vs internal. Details: DMA guide. Hubs: Warzone 2 / MWII, BO7 & Warzone.

Ricochet

Kernel-level visibility enables shadowbans, HWID waves, and aggressive scanning of anything injected into the CoD client — internals sit squarely in that crosshair.

Why DMA comes up for CoD

  • Off-PC binaries — operator software stays on another OS image.
  • BR intel — big maps reward radar/ESP-style reads.
  • Patch cadence — Ricochet updates often; validate any DMA SKU each season.

Available DMA options

Store hubs currently highlight software cheats with Ricochet-oriented notes. CoD-specific DMA SKUs may appear under those game pages when vendors ship them — confirm live listings before buying hardware. Until then, plan DMA as a validated strategy (firmware + vendor status), not a guaranteed Ricochet bypass.

Setup (when a CoD DMA build exists)

  1. Second PC for tools and overlay.
  2. DMA board + CFW approved by your seller for current Ricochet.
  3. USB link; clean power routing.
  4. KmBox-class HID for hardware aim paths.
  5. Extra display / fuser for ESP.

BIOS & wiring →

DMA vs internal

Internal = tight ESP/UAV/recoil integration but full Ricochet surface on the game OS. DMA = costly two-PC setup, smaller on-PC footprint, still subject to behavior, reports, and server-side checks.

CoD & Warzone resources:

All DMA cheats on IVSOFTE