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Valorant Secure Boot -

Vanguard loads the moment you turn on your PC, not just when you launch VALORANT. This allows it to catch bootkits before they can hide. However, even Vanguard had a blind spot. A sophisticated attacker could still flash a malicious driver into the (the software that boots your motherboard). If the cheat lives in the BIOS itself, even a kernel driver is helpless.

In five years, you likely won’t be able to play any major competitive online game without Secure Boot and TPM 2.0 enabled. As a gamer, being asked to dig into your BIOS is frustrating. Being told your perfectly functional five-year-old PC is suddenly "incompatible" stings. And the privacy concerns surrounding kernel-level anti-cheat are valid and worth discussing. valorant secure boot

If you have tried to launch Riot Games’ tactical shooter VALORANT in the past year, you might have been greeted by a confusing error message. Not a simple “Update your drivers” notification, but a cryptic red screen demanding something called Secure Boot and TPM 2.0 . Vanguard loads the moment you turn on your

However, for the health of competitive gaming, Secure Boot is a net positive. It raises the bar for cheaters from "download a free script" to "physically hack your motherboard." It forces cheat developers to compete with billion-dollar hardware manufacturers. A sophisticated attacker could still flash a malicious

For many players, this felt like a violation. “Why does a video game need to control my BIOS settings?” others asked. “Is Riot spying on me?”

So, take a deep breath, reboot into your BIOS, and flip that switch. The cheaters are praying you don't. And in the ranked lobbies of VALORANT , that’s a prayer we are happy to answer. Have you successfully enabled Secure Boot? Still getting the error? Drop your motherboard model in the comments below.

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