Ring-1, which sells a full-fledged cheat pack for Rainbow Six Siege for 25 euros per week (aimbot, ESP tools that show the health and distance of other players, gun recogitation, etc., and even stabs players at the other end of the map ,long knife; etc.), and sells Destiny 2 cheat packs such as PvP aimbot, unlimited ammo, ESP for 30 euros per week, is in trouble.
On July 23, Bungie and Ubisoft filed a joint lawsuit against Ring-1 in California state court, alleging that the company infringed copyright by listing the names behind Ring-1; and that the defendant’s actions caused millions of dollars in damages to the two studios.
The petition doesn’t give a specific figure, so we can’t say they want that much compensation, but the two want that amount to be determined by the court, which recent examples show that the defendant could indeed be sentenced to pay millions of dollars.
About six months ago, Bungie filed a joint lawsuit with Riot and went after GatorCheats. GatorCheats agreed to pay $2 million in damages and closed all its pages.