A hardware ID ban is a fingerprint of your machine stored server-side. When you try to log in on a banned machine, the game reads your hardware identifiers, matches them against the ban database, and blocks you before you even see the lobby. Our HWID spoofer replaces those identifiers with randomised values before the game reads them. The ban check returns no match and you're in. Works across 200+ games including Fortnite, Valorant, Rust, Warzone, and others. Temporary and permanent options available. Tested against every major anti-cheat platform currently in use.
When a game bans you at hardware level, it records a set of machine identifiers — typically motherboard serial number, hard drive serial, network adapter MAC address, and sometimes GPU and BIOS identifiers. These values are static on most machines. The next time you log in, the anti-cheat reads the same identifiers and matches them against its ban database. A HWID spoofer intercepts that read and substitutes randomised values. From the anti-cheat's perspective, it's seeing a completely different machine. The spoofer handles both user-mode anti-cheats like EAC and kernel-mode anti-cheats like Vanguard correctly. After spoofing, create a new account, log in, and the ban doesn't follow you.
Temp HWID Spoofer · Perm HWID Spoofer · Fortnite Spoofer · Valorant Spoofer
Our HWID spoofer is tested against the major anti-cheat systems currently deployed: Easy Anti-Cheat (EAC), BattlEye, and Vanguard. Together these cover most popular online titles — Fortnite, Rust, Valorant, Warzone, Rainbow Six Siege, PUBG, Apex Legends, and hundreds more. Each anti-cheat reads hardware identifiers differently, and our spoofer addresses each reading method specifically. The package documentation lists exactly which anti-cheats and games are supported. If you're banned in a game running a less-common anti-cheat not on the supported list, contact us on Discord before purchasing — we'll confirm compatibility upfront rather than have you discover it after.
Yes, both options are fully reversible. The temporary spoofer resets automatically on reboot — all hardware identifiers return to their original values the next time your PC starts, without any action on your part. The permanent spoofer writes new identifier values that persist across restarts but includes a dedicated reset utility that restores original values whenever you need them. There's no physical hardware modification and no permanent change that can't be undone. If you sell your PC, need a warranty repair, or want original identifiers back for any reason, the reset utility handles it cleanly within a few minutes.
We monitor detection status continuously on isolated test accounts across every supported game. If a detection event occurs, we identify it before it affects the full subscriber base. You receive immediate email notification, billing pauses automatically, and Discord status updates go out until a patch is ready — typically within hours. It hasn't happened since 2020 across any title we support. When we push a patch, we validate it against each supported anti-cheat separately before issuing the all-clear. Updates are delivered through your original download link — no new purchase required, no manual request needed. The process is automatic.
Once active, the spoofer affects all hardware identifiers globally across every application and game on that machine simultaneously. You don't configure it separately per game or run multiple instances. If you're banned in Fortnite, Valorant, and Rust on the same PC, a single activation covers all three at once. The license covers one physical PC. If you play on multiple machines, you'd need separate licenses for each. The spoofer doesn't interfere with games you're not banned in — it changes what hardware identifiers they read, and unbanned games treat those identifiers the same as any standard PC.