I Tested Ricochet’s Failed Attestation Lobbies

Ricochet Anti-Cheat Season 4 added a new failed attestation restriction for Call of Duty players who do not pass TPM 2.0, Secure Boot, and Microsoft Azure attestation checks. So we tested the lobbies. At the time, my friend could not update his firmware, which meant he was limited to the restricted playlist options: Battle Royale Casuals in Warzone and Nuketown 24/7 in multiplayer. The big question was simple: Are these failed attestation lobbies full of cheaters, or are they mostly normal players who just could not update their PCs? We played Warzone first, and honestly, we barely saw anything crazy. Then we tested multiplayer on Nuketown 24/7, and that is where things started looking a lot more suspicious. This video breaks down what we saw, what Ricochet’s failed attestation system is supposed to do, and whether these restricted lobbies actually separate cheaters or just punish players with firmware and BIOS problems. If you are tired of cheaters ruining Call of Duty, this one is for you. Drop your verdict in the comments: did Ricochet expose cheaters, or did it just create another weird broken system? Mahalo for watching 🤙 💪 BECOME A MEMBER -    / @itshapa   💰 DONATE - https://streamelements.com/itshapa-30... 🔥 MERCH STORE - https://store.streamelements.com/itsh... 👉 JOIN THE DISCORD -   / discord   🐦Twitter -   / itshapa   #CallOfDuty #RicochetAntiCheat #Warzone #BlackOps7 #CODCheaters #Nuketown247 #TPM20