EngineOwning, the famous provider of hacks for Warzone, is not giving up on publishing. And this despite the fact that Activision is currently suing him.
On January 4, Activision filed a lawsuit against the German company. Alleging that his hacks had resulted in “millions of dollars” damage.
News of this lawsuit has taken its toll on the cheating industry. Indeed the competitor Cynical Software announced that it would no longer sell hacks linked to CoD at the risk of being sued.
One would think that the targets of the lawsuit, EngineOwning, would be quick to go out of business as well. But it would seem that it is quite the opposite.
A knife-drawn war between Activision and the hack providers in Warzone
On January 6, the infamous hacking company announced that its Vanguard cheat has been updated and is working again.
Oddly enough, in a customer service demo, they compensated subscribers by adding an eight-day bonus to active subscriptions.
Additionally, EO has stated that updates to the hack software are in the works. As part of assisting active users against Ricochet, the brand new anti-cheat from Activison.
Dear Customers,
our Vanguard Cheat has been updated and is fully working again. Lost subscription time has been compensated and an additional 8 bonus days have been added to all active subscriptions.
Updates to our HWID Spoofer will follow soon.– EngineOwning.to (@engineowningto) January 6, 2022
We’ll have to wait and see how the lawsuit and these hacks develop, but it looks like neither side is blinking.
And this as Activision steps up its fight in the war against cheaters.