The G.T.I. Security Team is making a significant change to how victims of cheating are treated in Delta Force. In the latest weekly enforcement report, the developers announced that the cheat kill compensation system now covers players affected by cheaters receiving 30-day bans, not just those hit with the maximum 10-year penalty.
This is a major win for fair play. Previously, if you lost your high-tier gear in a tactical extraction to a cheater who only received a temporary suspension, you were often left empty-handed. By lowering the threshold for compensation eligibility, the security team is acknowledging that even shorter-term disruptions deserve a payout to keep the economy balanced for legitimate players. If you are eligible, expect your compensation via in-game mail within three business days of the ban confirmation.
The sheer scale of the latest crackdown is impressive. Between March 23 and March 29, the security team issued 4,249 permanent 10-year bans on PC and blocked over 16,000 specific devices. The team also took aim at the game's economy, addressing 35,507 instances of automated scripts, including auto-farming and multi-client logistics. These scripts often inflate the market and ruin the tactical pacing of the game, so seeing this volume of enforcement is a healthy sign for the long-term meta.
Beyond traditional cheating, Delta Force is also targeting Real Money Trading (RMT). The report confirms that illicit Delta Coins and Tickets acquired through unauthorized third-party top-ups have been confiscated. For a tactical shooter where gear value matters, keeping the currency loop closed is vital for competitive integrity. With more robust compensation and aggressive script detection, the G.T.I. Security Team is proving they are serious about protecting your kit.
