Players affected by cheaters in Delta Force just got a significant safety net. TiMi Studio Group has officially expanded the cheat kill compensation policy, ensuring that victims of players receiving 30-day bans are now eligible for reimbursement, moving beyond the previous restriction that only covered 10-year ban scenarios.
This policy shift is a huge win for the community's tactical integrity. In a high-stakes shooter where gear and positioning matter, losing a kit to a script-user feels awful. By lowering the threshold for compensation, the devs are acknowledging that even "temporary" cheaters cause permanent frustration for honest players. If you've been taken out by someone who subsequently catches a month-long suspension, keep an eye on your inbox for those lost resources.
The scale of the latest enforcement wave is staggering. Between April 6 and April 12, the G.T.I. Security team handed out 10-year bans to 6,366 PC users and 638 mobile users. This wasn't just about aimbots, either; the crackdown heavily targeted economic violations. The team addressed 28,559 instances of automated scripting and 51 cases of illicit Delta Coin and Ticket acquisition. For a tactical extraction-style game, protecting the in-game economy is just as vital as protecting the gunplay.
TiMi has reiterated a zero-tolerance stance, utilizing IP blocks and permanent hardware bans for severe offenders. Whether it's third-party plug-ins or exploiting game bugs for an unfair advantage, the message is clear: play fair or lose access entirely. This level of transparency in ban numbers and policy updates is exactly what Delta Force needs to maintain a healthy competitive environment as it grows.
