Recently, according to GameSpot, the lawsuit initiated by Tencent and Krafton (PUBG mobile game developer) abroad against the PUBG Mobile game plug-in team has ended. The sued plug-in gang will pay Tencent and Krafton about 10 million US dollars. compensation and compensation.
Courts in the U.S. and Germany have both ruled the same, supporting Tencent and Krafton’s claims. Plug-in gangs produce and sell plug-in cheating software, allowing cheaters to gain an unfair advantage in the game and infringing on the interests of game manufacturers.
PUBG Mobile game producer Rick Li said: Player PUBG Mobile is enjoyed by millions of players around the world, and we want to ensure that players are on a level playing field. The actions of these hacker gangs are ruining the game. Fairness and this verdict also show our attitude that we will not tolerate cheating.
The indicted cheating gang not only needs to pay 10 million US dollars in compensation but is also ordered to provide the technical details of their cheating and explain their accomplices. Tencent and Krafton announced that they will invest the funds in anti-plug-in technology research, and will launch a device ban function in the future, prohibiting devices that have been connected to log in to the PUBG Mobile game or create new accounts.