How Long Has RawCheats Been Around?
RawCheats has been operating continuously since 2022, with the in-house engineering team behind it building external cheats and HWID spoofers since well before then. Trustpilot reviews span multiple years, the forum status board has timestamped detection-status posts going back across multiple anti-cheat update cycles, and the same engineering team and shared SDK has shipped patches through every major EAC, BattlEye, and NeacSafe cycle since launch.
Longevity in the cheat niche is a verifiable signal because most scam operations cannot sustain it. Sites that take Bitcoin and vanish within weeks leave no Trustpilot timeline, no forum archive, no Discord history. Sites that operate continuously across years leave provable footprints in all three. Here is what ours looks like.
Continuous operation since 2022
RawCheats has shipped product continuously since 2022. The current site is the public-facing brand for an engineering team that worked on external overlay cheats and HWID spoofer development for years before that, which is why the in-house SDK that powers all six current products is mature rather than a recently-stood-up effort.
The verifiable timeline:
- Trustpilot review timeline spans the full operational window with reviews dated across multiple years
- Forum status board posts with timestamped detection events going back across the full operational window
- Customer Discord with channel-creation dates and message archives spanning the operational window
- Domain WHOIS history showing continuous ownership
None of those are testimony — they are infrastructure timestamps that an outside observer can cross-check independently.
What "continuous" specifically means
Continuous operation means the same team, same engineering approach, same support staff across the operational window. Not "same brand name, new team every six months" — many cheat sites rebrand-and-relaunch when their reputation gets damaged, which produces a confusing footprint where the URL is old but the operation behind it is new.
For us, the same engineers who patched the Fortnite Bugha FNCS event detection wave in 2025 are the same engineers patching the March 2026 Overwatch ban wave signature push today. Same SDK, same offset pipeline, same support staff. Continuity of personnel matters because cheat engineering is heavily knowledge-dependent — a new team starting from scratch cannot match the patch turnaround time of a team that already knows every game's memory layout.
How operational longevity correlates with patch quality
Sustained operations across multiple anti-cheat update cycles produce two compounding advantages:
Faster patches. Each detection event teaches the engineering team something about the AC vendor's update patterns, signature design, and ban-wave timing. Years of cycles compound into pattern recognition that lets us predict where the next detection vector will land. Newer teams have to rediscover each pattern.
Better infrastructure. The loader, dashboard, forum, BTCPay setup, Stripe integration, and support tooling are all systems that get better over time. Continuous operation means we have iterated on every piece. A new operation has none of that compounding.
What this looks like to a new buyer
For a buyer doing due diligence before purchase, the longevity signal is verifiable through three quick checks:
- Trustpilot. Search "RawCheats" — see review timestamps spanning the operational window. Burst-pattern reviews (all dated in a narrow window) is a scam signal; distributed timestamps across months and years is a real-operation signal.
- Forum archive. Visit the forum and scroll back through status posts. Continuous posting cadence with timestamps spanning the operational window is the signal you want.
- Discord age. The customer Discord shows server-creation date and channel-creation dates. Recent server with no archive is a scam signal; multi-year server with archived history is a continuous-operation signal.
Why competitors cannot fake this
The footprint compounds across years of real operation. A new operation cannot fake:
- Trustpilot reviews with old timestamps (Trustpilot deletes obvious fakes)
- Forum posts with timestamps from before the site existed
- Discord servers with creation dates predating the operation
- Domain WHOIS records showing continuous ownership across years
Some scam operations try by buying expired domains with old WHOIS histories, but the rest of the infrastructure (Discord, Trustpilot, forum) cannot be backdated and exposes the rebrand.
The team behind the brand
The engineering core is small, deliberately. Sustained operation means full-time engineers paid to reverse anti-cheat updates, build patched modules, and maintain the shared SDK across six products. Support staff handle Discord and refund requests. No outsourced reseller relationships, no upstream supplier we depend on, no third-party cheat developers we white-label.
The in-house architecture matters because reseller marketplaces inherit upstream risk — when their supplier gets detected, every reseller goes down together. We patch from our own source, so detection events affect only us and we control patch timing.
For deeper context on what distinguishes our infrastructure from reseller-marketplace competitors, see why should I pick RawCheats over competitors. For real-time detection status across all products, see the forum.
Sources
- Trustpilot — Trustpilot
- Dexerto Fortnite Coverage — Dexerto
- Overwatch News — Blizzard
- About Easy Anti-Cheat — Epic Games
Related Questions
Yes. Every product ships with the full feature set advertised on the product page — no gated upsells, no "premium tier" that gates the aimbot, no missing features. Aimbot, ESP, wallhack, triggerbot, exploits, and per-product specials (radar on PUBG, building delays on Fortnite) all unlock at the $4.99 entry tier. Verification path is in the loader's preview build, demo videos on each product page, and the Discord support video confirmation channel for skeptical buyers.
No. RawCheats is in-house engineered, not a reseller storefront. Every product — loader, driver, menu framework, offset pipeline — is developed by our team and shipped to customers under a published subscription model. Refunds, pro-rated detection credit, and PCI-grade payment routing through Stripe and self-hosted BTCPay make this verifiable. The "scam cheat" pattern — unanswered Discord, missing dashboards, vanishing sites — does not match our infrastructure. Trustpilot and forum activity confirm continuous operation.
Yes, RawCheats is safe to use when paired with our HWID Spoofer and configured with the humanizer enabled. All products run as external overlays outside the protected game process, so anti-cheats like Easy Anti-Cheat and BattlEye don't see memory touches or DLL injections. Payments route through Stripe and BTCPay, so card details never sit on our servers. Account survival rate is among the highest in the cheat niche, and detection events trigger automatic loader pauses and pro-rated credit.
RawCheats is the better long-term choice because we engineer in-house while Battlelog operates as a reseller marketplace. When the upstream cheat developer Battlelog stocks gets detected by EAC or BattlEye, every seller on Battlelog goes down simultaneously and waits days for the upstream patch. RawCheats patches in 6-12 hours from our own source. Battlelog also charges $50-90/month for feature sets we ship at $34.99 with no tiered upsells.
Three structural reasons. First: we engineer in-house, so we patch detections in 6-12 hours from our own source — resellers wait for upstream suppliers and lose days. Second: external overlay architecture means no DLL injection into the game, no kernel touches inside the protected scope — most competitors run internal cheats which die faster. Third: shared SDK across six products means one offset pipeline updates all titles together, instead of running six independently-maintained codebases that fragment under pressure.
