It’s 11 years old and Rocket League has decided it’s had it up to here with cheating. In a post (actually an “article,” which I guess the everything app has now) on X, the game’s official account announced that, come April, Rocket League will be implementing Easy Anti-Cheat.
“Adding Easy Anti-Cheat elevates our ability to detect and ban cheaters in real time, and is part of a broader effort that includes additional bot detection methods, and DDoS attack prevention,” said Psyonix.
“Community content like Steam Workshop maps is playable with or without Easy Anti-Cheat enabled, but you’ll want it off if you run mods on top of the content.”
Specific mods, like the kind used in Rocket League tournaments to aid spectation, will also be able to be used by specific accounts (you can’t apply, though—Psyonix will offer the ability to “specific partners” according to its own metrics).
Finally, and honestly, here’s the part that most matters to me: the devs promise not to absolutely hose your Steam Deck and Linux installs of Rocket League. That shouldn’t be a surprise—Easy Anti-Cheat is used by plenty of games that get the green light on Are We Anticheat Yet?—but Psyonix is owned by Epic, and Epic uses EAC for Fortnite which, infamously, will not work on your Deck. But Psyonix says “we know some of you love to play on Steam Deck and on Linux operating systems through apps like Proton, and this will still be supported with Easy Anti-Cheat on.”




