These attempt to rewrite data directly in your BIOS or on your hard drives for a deeper change. Risks and Trade-offs
Developers for games like Rainbow Six Siege and Apex Legends are in a constant "cat-and-mouse" game with spoofer creators. If a spoofer is detected during a "ban wave," you risk losing any new accounts immediately. Legitimate Alternatives
Permanent spoofers carry a risk of "bricking" your motherboard, turning an expensive gaming PC into a paperweight.
Getting hit with a hardware ID (HWID) ban is often a "digital scarlet letter" for your gaming rig. While most bans only block your account, a hardware ban blacklists your computer's unique components, making it nearly impossible to play again without significant changes.
For those who believe they were banned unjustly, some games have official appeal processes. For example, League of Legends Support allows players to request a re-evaluation of an HWID ban after one year.
A is designed to act as a digital mask, intercepting requests from anti-cheat systems like BattlEye or Easy Anti-Cheat (EAC) to feed them randomized, fake data. How HWID Spoofers Work
These work while the software is active and usually reset once you reboot. They are often preferred as they don't permanently alter your system's identity.
Alternatively, a safer but more expensive way to clear a "poisoned" HWID is to physically replace flagged hardware, such as your motherboard or SSD.