Battlefield 6 is finally hitting cheaters where it hurts, and it’s actually working
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By
Varun Mirchandani Published November 30, 2025 |
What’s happened? Battlefield 6 has continued to break records with an overall excellent response from the gaming community, but the game is far from perfect. Thankfully, after a rocky period littered with cheaters leveraging everything from aimbots to controller macros, Battlefield 6’s developers rolled out a major crackdown. The core of that effort: a new kernel-level anti-cheat system, EA Javelin, backed by Secure Boot requirements and aggressive bannings. The first results are live, and surprisingly solid: cheater reports have dropped dramatically, bans have spiked, and the studio says the vast majority of matches are now clean.
Why this is important: If you’re a fan of fair PvP, this basically means that Battlefield 6 is genuinely competitive again. For a shooter known for chaotic, large-scale battles, even a small percentage of cheaters can ruin matches. As such, bringing that “match infection rate” down to ~2% is no small feat, and it might just restore some integrity to the server population. That also shifts the pressure: cheaters can no longer spam matches undetected, swoop in with overpowered hacks, and hop from server to server. Now they have a real chance at getting caught, banned, and possibly excluded entirely.
Additionally, for community-driven modes, ranked play, or even just pub lobbies, all of this makes a big difference. At the same time, this crackdown signals a broader shift in how studios treat cheating: kernel-level anti-cheat, hardware checks, and massive enforcement. If this works long term, it could set a new standard, one where cheating becomes increasingly unattractive and risky for those who try.
Why should I care? If you bounced off Battlefield 6 because every other lobby felt like a cheater convention, this is genuinely good news. With millions of hacks blocked and only a tiny percentage of matches still getting hit, the game finally feels fair again. Which basically means your aim, your squad, and your strategy actually matter. Whether you’re a sweaty competitive player or someone who just wants to blow up tanks on a Saturday night, cleaner matches make the whole experience smoother, less rage-inducing, and a lot more fun.
Okay, so what’s next? Now it’s all about whether DICE can keep the pressure on. Expect more ban waves, more kernel-level tweaks, and probably a few angry cheat vendors scrambling to keep up. If you’re planning to jump back in, just keep Secure Boot on, update your drivers, and watch for the next community update. If the numbers keep trending this way, Battlefield 6 might finally stay clean long enough for everyone to enjoy the chaos the way it was meant to be played
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