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To the game’s watchdog, you’re a brand-new player on a brand-new PC.
Imagine your gaming PC has a permanent tattoo — a unique serial number etched into its very bones (your motherboard, hard drive, and network card). Get banned for cheating, and anti-cheats like BattlEye or EAC read that tattoo. New account? Doesn’t matter. Same tattoo = same ban. psg spoofer
A (often standing for "Permanent Spoofing Generator" or tied to certain cheat groups) pretends to erase that tattoo. In reality, it intercepts every call the anti-cheat makes for your hardware IDs and feeds back fake, clean ones — a different motherboard serial, a new disk ID, a masked MAC address. To the game’s watchdog, you’re a brand-new player
Spoofers dig deep into kernel mode (the same privileged layer as drivers and antivirus). That’s why they trigger false positives in security software. And many “free PSG spoofers” are just trojans in disguise — logging your passwords while promising to hide your ban. New account
No spoofer lasts forever. Anti-cheats update weekly, hunting for the spoofer’s hiding spots. But for a few days or weeks? The ghost gets to play again. Would you like a deeper explanation of how hardware IDs work, or a warning list of signs a spoofer is malicious?
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