It doesn’t stop cheating, it just makes cheating require spending a few hundred dollars and dealing with complex hardware setups. This means that relatively few people try.
Non-kernel anti-cheat can be bypassed by software. So it’s cheap and easily available.
That’s the only difference. Kernel anti-cheat doesn’t prevent cheating, it just makes it more expensive.
Is it actually effective tho?
It doesn’t stop cheating, it just makes cheating require spending a few hundred dollars and dealing with complex hardware setups. This means that relatively few people try.
Non-kernel anti-cheat can be bypassed by software. So it’s cheap and easily available.
That’s the only difference. Kernel anti-cheat doesn’t prevent cheating, it just makes it more expensive.
Can’t you just use a virtual machine?
That would let you hide things from the kernel anti-cheat but the AC can detect that it is running in a VM and just won’t let you play.
Is there really no such thing as a virtual machine that can’t pretend to be real hardware?