Apparent PUBG exploit makes players invisible and immune to circle damage


Apparent PUBG exploit makes players invisible and resistant to circle damage
Coming in second place in Player Unknown's Battlegrounds is always frustrating, but it’s much worse when you hit the final circle and there’s nobody there. Some players have noticed this phenomenon and matched it up with suspicious match statistics.

You can find out how to win the honorable way using our complete guide to Player Unknown's Battlegrounds.

Reddit or u/Changsha posted a thread yesterday to the PUBG subeditor with a mobile screenshot of a user’s data on opening, a site that compiles detailed multiplayer analytics. It shows a string of six first-place finishes in PUBG, along side a 12th-place and a 41st-place finish. While it’s possible for someone to be good enough at Battlegrounds to routinely score chicken dinners, what’s telling is that in four of these games, this player did zero damage and got zero kills.

u/Simon_Stallone posted a screenshot from a recent runner-up finish that shows the ultimate circle closing round the player, but the player count still reading two.

The most convincing piece of evidence was from u/college, who posted a link to a user page on opening. This user, T Pk_L, has placed first in 16 of their last 20 matches. Again, it’s an unlikely but technically possible achievement, but on the complete site, additional data is out there . For the bulk of those chicken dinners, T Pk_L hasn’t just done zero damage to other players, they’ve apparently not even moved. opening reports they traveled 0.00 kilometres in ten of those first-place finishes.

Creditors reported seeing a spread of glitches during play, like a player apparently becoming invisible after rounding a corner (with only a floating hip holster left on screen). Others noted the zero distance traveled and surmised the glitch or hack must be happening within the spawning area.

The players who have won with this exploit seem to remember enough that they’re using it to be taking steps to avoid automatic detection – while they’re racking up wins, they’re also careful to play a legitimate game every five or six matches.

Wins, of course, net players in-game currency to spend on PUBG’s loot crates, which contain cosmetic items which will be sold on the Steam marketplace, often for an honest deal of real-world money. So there’s definitely incentive for hackers to seek out ways around PUBG’s existing anti-cheating protocols.

We’ll see if the developers address this in PUBG’s next patch.



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