Riot Games, the developer of several popular esports titles such as Valuing and League of Legendsjust discovered a security vulnerability affecting several motherboards from Asus, Gigabyte, MSI, and ASRock that cheaters can use to bypass hardware security checks and make it impossible for the game’s anti-cheat software to detect them.
According to the company, the Input-Output Memory Management Unit (IOMMU), which protects system RAM from Direct Memory Access (DMA) devices, is not fully initializing upon boot in some motherboard models. This means that even though the BIOS might indicate that Pre-Boot DMA Protection is active, it’s not actually protecting the entire system.
DMA devices are hardware that plugs directly into the PCIe slot and bypasses the processor and the operating system. As the name suggests, it interacts directly with the computer’s memory, allowing it to read and write code directly on the system RAM.
When Riot Games’ security team discovered this vulnerability, it immediately worked with hardware manufacturers, which validated their findings. They then released BIOS updates to address the issue, ensuring that no one could exploit this weakness and gain an unfair advantage.
If your computer is affected by this bug, you’ll be given a restriction, and you won’t be able to launch Valuing. You can resolve this by updating your motherboard’s BIOS to the latest version and by ensuring that all security features like Secure Boot, VBS, and IOMMU are activated and working properly.
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