Hwid-spoofer ((better)) < BEST ◎ >

This is the simpler, less effective method. It involves manipulating data at the application level. User-mode spoofers essentially hook into the game's API calls or intercept specific registry entries that store hardware info. While this can bypass older or less sophisticated anti-cheat systems, modern anti-cheats are usually capable of detecting user-mode spoofing almost instantly.

: Attempting to flash firmware or modify deep system files can render a PC unbootable. hwid-spoofer

| Type | Persistence | Risk | Typical Price | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Session-only (until reboot) | Very High (likely malware) | $0 | | Paid/Subscription Spoofers | Persistent across reboots | Medium (detection waves) | $15–$50/month | | DIY/Manual Spoofers | Permanent (manual changes) | Low (if done correctly) | Time & expertise | | Hardware flashers | Permanent | High (brick risk) | $50–$200 one-time | This is the simpler, less effective method

When the anti-cheat calls these functions to read your disk serial number, the spoofer jumps in, blocks the request, and feeds back a randomized string (e.g., S3D9_X2F_88A instead of your real TOSHIBA_MQ01ABD100 ). While this can bypass older or less sophisticated

This is the standard for high-end spoofers. Modern anti-cheat software (like BattlEye, Easy Anti-Cheat, and Vanguard) runs at the "Kernel" level—the deepest layer of the operating system where hardware drivers reside. To trick these systems, the spoofer must also run in the kernel. It installs a driver that intercepts commands sent to the hardware before the anti-cheat can read the actual physical serial numbers.

: These attempt to permanently change the serial numbers stored in your firmware (like the BIOS or drive firmware). These are significantly riskier and can lead to hardware instability or "bricking" if done incorrectly.