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Looks like Epic Games may be looking to actually improve how Easy Anti-Cheat works on Linux, with a job listing for a Senior Game Security Engineer. While the Epic-owned Easy Anti-Cheat does work on Linux, it's not at the kernel level and that's partly why so many games that use it decide to actively block Linux.

Epic Games

From the job listing:

In this role, you will

  • Apply deep knowledge of operating system internals to detect and prevent the latest cheating techniques
  • Champion Linux anti-cheat capabilities for Epic
  • Reverse engineer cheats and other malicious software
  • Actively seek out the next opportunity to make an improvement
  • Communicate regularly with internal and external game developers to meet their unique needs
  • Build a strong overall understanding of our game security systems
  • Work closely with anti-cheat data analysts to quickly iterate on new techniques developers

What we're looking for

  • Expert knowledge of C/C++ in a security environment
  • Deep knowledge of Linux and Windows OS internals
  • Familiarity with development and security practices on Linux and Windows
  • Experience debugging and reverse engineering x86-64 binaries
  • Understanding of online multiplayer video game architectures
  • Experience working with data analytics to solve, prevent, or monitor problems at scale
  • Understanding of code obfuscation techniques

Job listings like this don't suddenly mean they're working towards Fortnite on Linux though. But at least it could be work towards eventually allowing it to work. Going by what Epic Games' CEO Tim Sweeney said back in 2023, Linux / SteamOS would need "tens of millions of users" before that were to happen.

See the job over on Epic Games.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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22 comments
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LoudTechie 3 hours ago
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Quoting: fschauppSounds like to me, Secureboot + Signed Kernel&Modules + SELinux + Signed Proton + Wayland will be maybe the new requirement chain of trust.
I mean, even some Android apps manage to get a solid set of system integrity check like for some banking and government authentication apps.

If the tradeoff for running modern and mostly cheater-free online multiplayer games is just running the official distro kernel and secureboot + selinux, count me absolutely in!
If it's some systemd-gamingd thing.. I maybe need to think about it a bit..
What you're imagining involves measured boot, not secure boot.
Unless you wouldn't mind switching the OS monopoly from Windows to the device manufacturer.
SELinux won't help shit, it would involve some of the more contentious extensions like TDX or some of the even more contentious modules I forgot.

Edit:
IPE could also help

Last edited by LoudTechie on 15 Jun 2026 at 4:07 pm UTC
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Quoting: LoudTechieSecure anti-cheat can be build in an open manner, but nobody has done it yet.
At the end I don't care for games that do not customers my freedom, especially on THEIR systems. Or does the game company pay me for getting my system compromised, while they also could do proper server side anti-cheat? My system is no gaming console, it is also a productive machine. And many other PCs of many other people are similar.

Last edited by PlayingOnLinuxphone on 15 Jun 2026 at 4:59 pm UTC
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