On May 28 the Delta Force Steam channel posted two announcements at once: another G.T.I. Security Notice of penalties for violations (the security team’s ban report) and mid-season content — Mid-season Supplies and the Iron Dame appearance draw. This is a familiar Delta Force combo: the developer feeds content to legit players while publicly reporting on bans for violators. Here’s what it means for players running software.
G.T.I. Security keeps publishing reports
We’ve covered in detail how Delta Force’s security team works: G.T.I. Security publishes weekly how many accounts were sanctioned and why. The fresh notice continues that practice. Consistently sanctioned:
- any “illegal software” — cheats, injectors, botting;
- intentional teaming with cheaters — even without running software yourself;
- griefing, bug abuse, transferring accounts to violators.
Durations run from 1 hour to 10 years, plus device bans and IP blocks. In past reports G.T.I. specifically mentioned DMA bans and real-time interception — meaning detection is no longer user-mode only.
What’s in the mid-season update
The content side on May 28:
- Mid-season Supplies — mid-season in-game reward packs.
- Iron Dame Appearance Lucky Draw — a cosmetic appearance draw.
A content patch is harmless on its own, but it almost always ships with a client change — and therefore potentially new offsets and updated checks. For software it’s the same signal: rebuild after the update.
Why public Delta Force cheats are a risk
Delta Force runs on Tencent’s proprietary anti-cheat (ACE) plus server-side behavior analytics. G.T.I.’s public reporting signals confidence in detection. Our read hasn’t changed since the last report:
- Public builds are in the red zone — a mass cheat is detected within a week of release.
- Private/VIP only, from verified sellers with confirmed activity in May 2026.
- DMA at your own risk: ACE has adapted; wait 2–3 weeks of feedback before buying new chips.
- HWID spoofer every session — device bans are routine.
What to do if you run software on Delta Force
- Don’t log in during the first day after a mid-season patch — let your provider rebuild for the new build.
- Filter sellers harder than usual: read recent reviews and the detection status.
- Keep your HWID spoofer current; without it, one ban drags every account on the machine.
- Read the weekly G.T.I. reports — they hint at which detection methods just leveled up.
Bottom line
Delta Force stays on a fully public anti-cheat course, and a “penalties report + mid-season content” combo on the same day is a classic moment to wait out with software. The developer clearly hasn’t given up: filter your suppliers, don’t skimp on the spoofer, and don’t rush right after patches. The full ACE stack and software-type breakdown is in our G.T.I. Security piece and the Delta Force guide.
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