Activision's Team RICOCHET is escalating its war on cheaters by introducing a new, innovative anti-cheat measure in Call of Duty: Modern Warfare III and Warzone. This is the next step in the developer's years-long battle against in-game exploiters and hackers.

The RICOCHET Anti-Cheat team, which is built specifically to maintain fair play in Call of Duty, has announced a series of advanced tactics to identify and punish cheaters, including a combination of machine learning, client- and server-side systems, and more creative measures like the newly introduced feature named Splat.

Splat, a particularly intriguing addition to the anti-cheat arsenal, is designed to target cheaters in a novel and somewhat amusing manner. In Warzone, if a player is identified as a cheater before deploying from the airplane, the game's anti-cheat software will disable the cheater's parachute, resulting in a literal crash landing. For those cheaters who manage to evade initial detection and deploy their parachute, Splat has another trick up its sleeve. It can adjust their velocity during the game, transforming a simple action like a bunny hop into a fatal plummet from a great height. This unique approach not only punishes cheaters but also serves as a deterrent for potential exploiters.

For all the flack that Activision Blizzard receives, RICOCHET has been largely successful since its initial implementation two years ago.