A quick note that I am not an expert nor do I fully understand everything that I am talking about here (I don't have a Wooting myself), so I may get some things wrong or miss out on important things. Please point out these corrections/ommisions if you notice them.
For anyone who is unaware, the former rank 3 player chud son (also known as Cloutiful/Epic Gaming) has recently been restricted for cheating.
The way he cheated was that he use a feature on the Wooting software called Dynamic Keystroke (DKS). Using this feature he was able to set the key he pressed with his non-dominant finger to actuate on an upstroke, where usually a Wooting key is set to actuate on a downstroke. With these settings, by tapping both keys at once, instead of the two inputs occurring at the same time, one would occur when he pressed down and the other when he lifts up. In this way he was able to play high-bpm streams with good accuracy by effectively just doubletapping, leading to many high pp plays including a 2000pp choke, and a number 3 spot on the leaderboards.
From what others can tell, he would toggle these settings only when he were to play a stream, playing the rest of the map fully legitimately. I'm guessing he would've toggled this setting on/off with a keyboard shortcut or the pedals seen below his desk in his liveplay.
The reason I am making this thread is that I believe that this blurs the line significantly between what is cheating and what isn't. Cloutiful did not utilise any unnecessary software in order to cheat, nor did he set a macro or multiple actions to one keystroke. He simply used a setting which came packaged with the keyboard he had, a keyboard which many players have, including many top players, as well as a technique that is considered fair game if you ignore the keyboard settings (doubletapping itself isn't considered cheating).
However, it is clear that from the community response as well as the actions of the osu team that this method is considered cheating and a bannable offense.
The first thing I wanted to discuss is what exactly constitutes cheating and not cheating? What exactly is it about Cloutiful's method which makes it cheating, compared to rake-tapping which you are allowed to submit plays with, and also rapid-trigger/Wooting software which is widely accepted as the next evolution of the game, even though Cloutiful's method is just a slightly unconventional application of these things? Should Cloutiful's method even be considered cheating in the first place?
The next thing I wanted to discuss was where we should draw the line specifically? Perhaps we can say that you are not allowed to have one key bound to an upstroke while another is bound to a downstroke, while having both keys bound to the same stroke is ok. Or maybe we should make it so that any input which doesn't come from the downstroke of a key is illegitimate. Or maybe the issue is not the settings themselves but the act of toggling between them mid map. Or maybe something else? I think this is an useful thing to discuss so we can draw clear lines in the future.
Lastly, I wanted to discuss how this would be enforced. In Cloutiful's case, the most distinctive factor was the abnormal consistency in key hold times, maybe the osu anti-cheat could be programmed to detect such abnormalities. I think the real issue is that if what Cloutiful did was literally just changing the Wooting settings, there are likely many other people who have played around with this method, and even submitted plays with it. Another thing is that even though it is clear that Cloutiful himself viewed this as cheating, other players using this method might stumble upon it thinking it's just a creative way to use the Wooting keyboard, without actually intending to cheat. This is a view which Wooting holds themselves from this tweet they posted in response to this cheating case.
As technology and osu itself continues to evolve, we are sure to encounter more of these cases, where the lines between cheating and advancement are blurred. Although in this case it feels pretty cut and dry that Cloutiful was cheating, future cases may not be. I hope this discussion can prepare us for these future cases.
Also wanted to add that this is what the osu wiki says:
Play fair. Using third-party utilities of any kind to get any sort of advantage is not okay. This includes things like macro programs, aim-assist programs, timescale modification, and so on. If a program is doing something to help you play the game that you should be doing yourself, it isn't okay!
Also, from now on I will refer to this technique as "chudtapping" because it sounds funny. Credit to this post: https://www.reddit.com/r/osugame/comments/1dilwik/petition_to_call_cloutifuls_dks_technique/
For anyone who is unaware, the former rank 3 player chud son (also known as Cloutiful/Epic Gaming) has recently been restricted for cheating.
The way he cheated was that he use a feature on the Wooting software called Dynamic Keystroke (DKS). Using this feature he was able to set the key he pressed with his non-dominant finger to actuate on an upstroke, where usually a Wooting key is set to actuate on a downstroke. With these settings, by tapping both keys at once, instead of the two inputs occurring at the same time, one would occur when he pressed down and the other when he lifts up. In this way he was able to play high-bpm streams with good accuracy by effectively just doubletapping, leading to many high pp plays including a 2000pp choke, and a number 3 spot on the leaderboards.
From what others can tell, he would toggle these settings only when he were to play a stream, playing the rest of the map fully legitimately. I'm guessing he would've toggled this setting on/off with a keyboard shortcut or the pedals seen below his desk in his liveplay.
The reason I am making this thread is that I believe that this blurs the line significantly between what is cheating and what isn't. Cloutiful did not utilise any unnecessary software in order to cheat, nor did he set a macro or multiple actions to one keystroke. He simply used a setting which came packaged with the keyboard he had, a keyboard which many players have, including many top players, as well as a technique that is considered fair game if you ignore the keyboard settings (doubletapping itself isn't considered cheating).
However, it is clear that from the community response as well as the actions of the osu team that this method is considered cheating and a bannable offense.
The first thing I wanted to discuss is what exactly constitutes cheating and not cheating? What exactly is it about Cloutiful's method which makes it cheating, compared to rake-tapping which you are allowed to submit plays with, and also rapid-trigger/Wooting software which is widely accepted as the next evolution of the game, even though Cloutiful's method is just a slightly unconventional application of these things? Should Cloutiful's method even be considered cheating in the first place?
The next thing I wanted to discuss was where we should draw the line specifically? Perhaps we can say that you are not allowed to have one key bound to an upstroke while another is bound to a downstroke, while having both keys bound to the same stroke is ok. Or maybe we should make it so that any input which doesn't come from the downstroke of a key is illegitimate. Or maybe the issue is not the settings themselves but the act of toggling between them mid map. Or maybe something else? I think this is an useful thing to discuss so we can draw clear lines in the future.
Lastly, I wanted to discuss how this would be enforced. In Cloutiful's case, the most distinctive factor was the abnormal consistency in key hold times, maybe the osu anti-cheat could be programmed to detect such abnormalities. I think the real issue is that if what Cloutiful did was literally just changing the Wooting settings, there are likely many other people who have played around with this method, and even submitted plays with it. Another thing is that even though it is clear that Cloutiful himself viewed this as cheating, other players using this method might stumble upon it thinking it's just a creative way to use the Wooting keyboard, without actually intending to cheat. This is a view which Wooting holds themselves from this tweet they posted in response to this cheating case.
As technology and osu itself continues to evolve, we are sure to encounter more of these cases, where the lines between cheating and advancement are blurred. Although in this case it feels pretty cut and dry that Cloutiful was cheating, future cases may not be. I hope this discussion can prepare us for these future cases.
Also wanted to add that this is what the osu wiki says:
Play fair. Using third-party utilities of any kind to get any sort of advantage is not okay. This includes things like macro programs, aim-assist programs, timescale modification, and so on. If a program is doing something to help you play the game that you should be doing yourself, it isn't okay!
Also, from now on I will refer to this technique as "chudtapping" because it sounds funny. Credit to this post: https://www.reddit.com/r/osugame/comments/1dilwik/petition_to_call_cloutifuls_dks_technique/