Lag switch - how some gamers cheat

I'll preface this post by saying I'm definitely not an advocate for using this hack, but if you find yourself getting knocked off by an invisible opponent, at least you'll know what might be going on.

A lag switch is a device that causes a network disruption during online gameplay to the benefit of one of the players. As the video above shows, it can be made with a dollar's worth of parts and very little technical proficiency. From the Wikipedia entry on online game cheating:

By attaching a physical device (called a lag switch) to a standard Ethernet cable, a player is able to disrupt updates/communication from the server with the intent of tricking the game server into continuing to accept client-side updates (which remain unimpeded). Since the client game-player is impeding the reception of information download, on the client game-player's side the opponents will slow down or stop moving, allowing the client game-player to more easily shoot them, block them, out-race them, etc. From the other players' perspectives, the person using the lag switch may appear to be teleporting, invincible, having delayed animations or fast-forwarded game play, or the player may simply find themselves losing to an invisible opponent.

Though I'm not a gamer, I found this cheat to be particularly interesting since it abuses the very mechanism that's supposed to make gameplay fair and smooth for players with differing connection speeds. The hack essentially interrupts the Rx pair of the ethernet connection, while allowing the Tx pair to continue transmitting. The game is designed so that in a normal lagging network scenario you can shoot at other players in the location where your game client perceives them to be. Otherwise, you'd have to be predicting the future, aiming at where the other player will be seconds from now when their network packets finally arrive. Shut off only the Rx pair, and your game client can only interpolate the location of the other players; they effectively stop. With the Tx pair still active, your client is still able to send collision events to the server, making your opponent dead (and you a cheater).

I don't think this is a new hack by any means, so chances are there are games that are affected, and many more that aren't. Any regular gamers out there want to chime in on what games are most affected by this? Is the practice common? It seems like this would just about completely spoil an otherwise fun experience.

How to Make a Lag Switch
Wikipedia: Online Game Cheating


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Comments

Oldest comments listed first.

Posted by: SomeoneElse on February 20, 2009 at 5:29 AM

I was pretty much shuddering at his mis-pronunciation of "solder" and "soldering". Even worse, he decided to RUB the solder on without heating the wires! GAa!


Posted by: iprefermuffins on February 20, 2009 at 10:43 AM

That's actually an (the?) accepted British pronunciation of solder/soldering, though the guy doesn't sound like he speaks with a British accent.


Posted by: moregieves on February 20, 2009 at 11:23 AM

I play 'Resistance Fall of Man' on the PS3 and have died countless times at the hands of laggers and glitchers. Although it's clearly an irritant which the gaming community attempts to self-regulate (and I have had some brilliantly fun games-within-games charging round hunting the lagger(s)), it's also a bit of a developing sub-culture, with games popping up advertising 'only glitch'... ahem.

I was intrigued to see a critique of the pronunciation of 'solder'... so far as I'm concerned 'sole' + 'der' is correct - how else can it be said? Enlighten me!

M


Posted by: Tyler on February 20, 2009 at 12:26 PM

sodder


Posted by: Nick on February 20, 2009 at 2:15 PM

saw+der


Posted by: miked on February 20, 2009 at 5:59 PM

This is the stupidest thing I've seen in a while. I can think of so many better ways of doing this...

It looks like the kid is more accustomed to making pipes out of aluminum foil rather than working with anything remotely electronic.

*shaking head*


Posted by: That Guy on February 23, 2009 at 5:25 PM

Your first clue is the non use of any good wire strippers. Two is he has crappy tools, and three he went on youtube and looked up how to solder.

People liek this are idiots not only im a skilled engineer but come on don't give a tutorial on cheating and not know how to pronounce the word.


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