startingtimer 🍑🌸 (low iq individual)
43.2K posts

startingtimer 🍑🌸 (low iq individual)
@StartingTimer
@ilovehutaocutie


bunny paiges give me so much cuteness aggression i throw my phone in the air




Duel casino blackjack dealer imitates San Diego shooter

It really isn’t my week…






Game: Valorant AC: Vanguard (VGK) Today’s Vanguard anti-cheat update blocked the majority of DMA firmwares using SATA/NVMe. VGK suddenly triggered an IOMMU restart warning in-game, after which the DMA firmware becomes completely unusable, even without the game running or after uninstalling Vanguard. Only fix is a full OS reinstall. It’s using IOMMU to create read blocks, which permanently breaks the majority of almost all SATA/NVMe firmwares once triggered. Even the advanced H2-board got affected. Confirmed Firmware Block wave by @ItsGamerDoc


Riot Games has released a new update for Valorant’s Vanguard anti-cheat system aimed at stopping advanced DMA (Direct Memory Access) cheating hardware. Vanguard anticheat now damages the firmware of these devices upon detection. It can be repaired, but bricking a person's hardware without their consent or knowledge is highly illegal The update targets certain SATA and NVMe firmware setups commonly used in expensive DMA cheating devices. These cheats rely on external hardware to read game memory while bypassing traditional anti-cheat detection methods. Some users claim Vanguard now triggers IOMMU-related warnings that can temporarily block affected hardware until system settings or firmware are updated. These DMA cheats have become popular in competitive games because they bypass many kernel-level anti-cheat systems. Riot has worked with motherboard manufacturers including ASUS, MSI, Gigabyte, and ASRock to address firmware vulnerabilities related to DMA access.



















