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Game companies have successfully sued cheat creators and users. In 2022, Bungie (Destiny 2) won a $12 million lawsuit against a cheat seller. While individual users are rarely sued, large-scale distribution of free keys could attract attention.
However, cheat developers are not charities. They invest time in bypassing anti-cheat updates, maintaining servers, and avoiding legal threats. They have zero incentive to give away free keys to strangers. Any "free key generator" or "giveaway" is almost certainly a deception.
While legitimate free keys are a myth, there is a sub-sector of the cheating community dedicated to "cracking" software. This involves skilled reverse engineers removing the licensing check from the cheat loader.
Premium cheat providers use sophisticated licensing systems (often HWID-locked, meaning Hardware ID locked). When a user buys a subscription, the server generates a unique key tied to their specific computer. The cheat loader (the software that injects the cheat into the game) checks this key against a remote server before launching.
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