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The biggest mistake they make is ADS'ing to a player and tracking them.
If they refrain from that, and simply keep players within their viewing area and only ADS when they have line of sight, it becomes hard to tell if they have ESP or they are just always lucky in where they are looking.
Some will go as far as doing fake ADS at areas they know there are no players to cast further doubt. They know that PUBG has not been able to detect their cheat software and will be relying upon a manual review.
I had one of these get a permaban yesterday. They shot my team mate with a 800m headshot and kept tracking me and him through the hills while I did the rez. Due to the distance, they couldn't confirm if we were visible or not, so they kept scoping on us precisely which was the only mistake in the entire game they made. If they scoped near us so that the cross hair wasn't right where we were behind cover, they'd have gotten away with it.
Reviewing the replay, the player was very, very careful with their ESP cheat. They were doing fake ADS to other areas to seed doubt. We knew they were using it though. They had us covered no matter where we were on the map.
The account in question was able to go undetected for 103 matches, and was a Chinese team VPN'ing in. I have no doubt that they'll be still playing on another account.
The account I mentioned in my previous post played for over a month cheating. Going from a new account to winning the first game they played and being the top player in their squad.
Pretty good for a new account.
PUBG's many anticheat solutions were unable to detect it during this time. "If" they do, the cheat software maker typically adjusts their software and has a cheat update within a day or two. The cheat maker also warns it's customers.
As the cheats are able to defeat/bypass PUBG's anticheat software pretty easily, the only other way they get detected is via player reports and manual review.
Veteran cheats know this, so mask they ESP cheat as best as they can without making it too obvious in the hope it will be enough to fool a human reviewer with enough reasonable doubt.
Unfortunately this is just the way it is.
I'd like PUBG to put a random bot under the map, and make it spam emotes and run around in circles. The bot would suicide on circle 5 if it doesn't die off due to circle damage before then. I'd like them to do this for one month and then ban anybody that repeatedly scoped in onto this bot during this time and issue a massive ESP ban wave. By doing this, they'll accurately ban the cheats even though they don't have the ability to detect the software.
The latter cheater is hard to detect, but not impossible. They know how the game works and they don't track players "that" obviously using wallhacks and they have undetectable ESP and aimbots.
Sounds like you do because only a cheater would say something like that.
You need skills to do that. However, multi-vac bans and multi-game bans on the sam account shows that some will still "cheat" huh?