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Security IT

Apex Legends Hacker Said He Hacked Tournament Games 'For Fun' (techcrunch.com) 34

An anonymous reader shares a report: On Sunday, the world of video games was shaken by a hacking and cheating scandal. During a competitive esports tournament of Apex Legends, a free-to-play shooter video game played by hundreds of thousands of players daily, hackers appeared to insert cheats into the games of two well-known streamers -- effectively hacking the players midgame. "Wait, what the fuck? I'm getting hacked, I'm getting hacked bro, I'm getting hacked," said one of the players allegedly compromised during a livestream of the gameplay. The incidents forced the organizers of the Apex Legends Global Series tournament, which has a $5 million total prize pool, to postpone the event indefinitely "due to the competitive integrity of this series being compromised."

As the midgame hacks were underway, the game's chatbot displayed messages on-screen that appeared to come from the hackers: "Apex hacking global series, by Destroyer2009 &R4andom," the messages read. In an interview with TechCrunch, the hacker Destroyer2009 took credit for the hacks, saying that he did it "just for fun," and with the goal of forcing the Apex Legends' developers to fix the vulnerability he exploited. The hacks sent the Apex Legends community into a frenzy, with countless streamers reacting to the incidents, and some players suggesting Apex Legends is not safe to play, because every player could be at risk of getting hacked not only in-game, but potentially having their computers hacked, too. Destroyer2009 declined to provide details of how he allegedly pulled off hacking the two players midgame, or what specific vulnerabilities he exploited.

"I really don't want to go into the details until everything is fully patched and everything goes back to normal," the hacker said. The only thing Destroyer2009 said regarding the technique he used was that the vulnerability "has nothing to do with the server and I've never touched anything outside of the Apex process," and that he did not hack the two players' computers directly. The hacks "never went outside of the game," he said.

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Apex Legends Hacker Said He Hacked Tournament Games 'For Fun'

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  • maybe this what it takes to fix DRM root kits & anit cheat root kits.

    or if they want an $5 million total prize pool they can take part of ship out on an temp basis locked down systems (that are white listed as no DRM no anit cheat) to each gamer who makes the tournament

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Myria ( 562655 )

      Getting a player's game process to execute arbitrary code is "hacking the two players' computers directly", so their statement is BS.

  • "Sheer, absolute boredom!"

  • I'm suspecting the culprit phished the two affected participants in advance of the tournament and installed rootkits. The indication for this was the attack wasn't more widespread than the two competitors. If the attack was explicitly performed within the game software, then all the players would have been vulnerable and the attacker would have had the opportunity to deploy a larger effect.

    This is also the type of attack that will prove trivial to trace by a federal forensics team and this person is going
    • by cob666 ( 656740 )

      I'm suspecting the culprit phished the two affected participants in advance of the tournament and installed rootkits. The indication for this was the attack wasn't more widespread than the two competitors.

      Did you even bother to read the linked article? It specifically states that the exploit is delivered through game via the anti-cheat software.

      • I certainly did read the article [techcrunch.com]. The anti-cheat software is not identified as a vector.

        Easy Anti-Cheat, the developers of the anti-cheat engine used in Apex Legends (and several other games), said in a statement on Monday that it was "confident that there is no RCE vulnerability within EAC being exploited."

        There is some other mention that actual cheat software had been deployed on the players' systems and a menu was displayed during the livestream. This sounds like a rootkit and the fact that it was limit

        • by Bahbus ( 1180627 )

          Except Easy Anti Cheat has always been known to be an attack vector. It's always been ass. All 3rd party anti-cheat services are. There is absolutely no reason to trust them at their word. The best anti-cheat is one developed in-house for the specific game in question, anything else is a waste of money, time, and effort.

      • the Hackerman(tm) responsible said himself that he used the game's executable code and nothing else.
  • Trash game with trash anti-cheat and a trash community. Just throw it in the bin.

  • What he did is. In America the way our anti-hacking laws work he'd be facing less jail time if he shot somebody dead (so long as it wasn't premeditated).

    Maybe nobody will press charges for some reason but do not fuck with mega corporations for fun. All it takes is one spiteful upper manager type willing to press charges and you're going to spend a good chunk of the rest of your life dealing with one stupid mistake when you're a kid. Or criminal system is not kind to anyone that gets caught up in it. Is
  • Games are fun. Put $5 million in prize money on the line, and games are business. From a certain PoV, hacking the game just for fun reclaims the purpose of gaming.

  • by samdu ( 114873 )

    There are really only two reasons for such shenanigans (three if you count revenge). Money and fun.

"Someone's been mean to you! Tell me who it is, so I can punch him tastefully." -- Ralph Bakshi's Mighty Mouse

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