It’⛦s a sad fact that for every game creators have spent hours designing, creating, and perfecting, there will be at least a small group🌄 of gamers who will wish to balance the odds in their favour by cheating their way to the top. It’s by no means a new concept, with card counting a common occurrence in games of blackjack and violations of the touch-move rule bringing chess masters to their knees in competitive circles.

But cheating has taken on a whole new meaning and a whole new ease of use with last century's introduction of video games. Like any piece of code, games can be hacked into, and sometimes it’s as simple as inputting some special keystrokes on a particular screen to receive unlimited lives. At other times, hacking can get insanely confusing, with some particularly obsessed players spending hours of their time🅠 attempting to con their way into a particular advantage such as walking through walls.

Thankfully, game developers have started to fight back against this kind of hacking, with many games now having entire defense mechanisms against anyone who tries to alter their code. Some will humorously chastise the player; others will shame them in front of their gaming communities — and the most savage among them will even wipe their save-data completely clean. This list will check out titles from all three of these categories, and we recommend you check it out if you’ve ever had any thoughts of hacking at hom🅷e.

15 GTA: Online Will Publicly Name And Shame You

Via: DLCompare.com

❀For a game that’s pretty much exclusively about stealing cars, killing innocent people, and having spendin🐠g time with "women of the street," GTA: Online can on occasion be pretty tame. The MMO has a dedicated server for “bad sports,” which they’ve described as anyone who disrupts the game by continually quitting missions to 🌞maintain their ranking and destroying players personal cars. Being designated as a “bad sport” will limit you to only playing with other bad sports, and it will also equip you with a compulsory “Dunce” hat so everyone knows how awful you are.

On top of that, the game will also punish players who make use of a certain glitch that allows you to buy a car in single-player mode and glitch it into online mode. If you attempt the♋ glitch, the game will allow it for so long but it will plant a bomb inside your prized vehicle to destroy both you and your dream car. Ouಞch.

14 Donkey Kong 64 Will Make Your Game Unplayable

Via: Mental Floss

Gamesharks were all the rage back in the 90s, when hacking your device wasn't so simple as attaching it to an internet connection and downloading some dodgy file🍨s onto it. But game developers 🐻soon started fighting back against the cheat cartridges, introducing measures to discourage their use.

In Donkey Kong 64, using certain Gameshark codes, such as one that causes infinite health, will cause the game to malfunction entirely. Players will be unable to pick up any item in the game, making getting past certain levels completely impossible. The worst part about this cheat is that it persists even if you deactivate the cheat and reset your machine, so if you’re going to play around with Gameshark codes then make sure you save before using them, so you’re not stuck with an unplayable game. Although being stuck with an unplayable game is something Donkey Kong fans would be quite familiar with.

13 Animal Crossing Will Harass You Into Submission

Via: GameSpot

Animal Crossing is one ofℱ those games that you either love or hate, and its stance on hacking exemplifies that perfectly. Full of fuzzy little animals with sassy personalities, the game is essentially a life simulator whose most exciting moments generally come when you catch a rare butterfly or pick some fruit from your garden.

But if you attempt to “cheat” in the game, ওthose fuzzy little animals will turn bitter really, really quick. By now, most players know before trying something crazy to save their game - that way, they can reset it if their exploits don’t work. But if you do that too much in Animal Crossing, a mole named Resetti will barge onto your screen and lecture you about your rudeness. Things get super passive-aggressive when he demands you type out the word “Sorry” before he’ll let you continue with your game. This guy sounds like the most annoying mom ever.

12 Gradius III Breaks Your Spaceship

Via: qwertyGUY (YouTube)

The Konami code is rarely referenced in video games post-21st century, but back in its 90s heyday, it was hidden away in pretty much every Konami game on the market. The code, which consists of pressing the buttons “Up, Up, Down, Down, Left, Right, Left, Right, B, A,” was a running gag that could be used to garner a variety of hel♏pful advantages. For example, 💖in Castlevania: Harmony of Dissonance, the code gave you the ability to play as a stronge🉐r character.

But in other games, Konami i♈ncluded the code ju﷽st to mess with its players. In Gradius III, a scrolling space-the❀med Konami-developed game released on the SNES in 1990, entering the code will not gift you with a special prize, but will instead completely destroy your spaceship as soon as you leave the pause screen. What a nasty trick!

11 Ark: Survival Enacts Vigilante Justice

Via: Kotaku Australia

Ark: Survival was the MMO of the Week on Steam for a minute, and was yet another online sandbox game, this time with dജinosaurs. The Ark developers hav♛e pretty lax rules about how to act on their servers, but this doesn’t stop the players from enacting their own form of justice.

Take the case of Ricky, who constantly trolled his server by making endless racist remarks. A group of players banded together and locked his character in a makeshift prison, serving him a sentence of ten hours of solitude for his crimes. Ricky attempted to commit suicide to escape his judgment, but his captors knocked him unconscious and force-fed him to maintain his high health (yes, you can seriously force someo😼ne to eat dinosaur meat in this game). The players got something out of it, using Ricky’s blood for transfusions and his poop for manure, and Ricky learned his lesson once and for all. We love a happy ending.

10 Marvel Vs. Capcom 3 Will Feed You To The Wolves

Via: MegaGames

Marvel Vs. Capcom 3, the Super Smash Bros. of the Avengers and Street Fighter studios, was a pretty unremarkabl🌄e game from start to finis𝄹h. It suffered from Office 2000-esque graphics, an uninspired story mode and some pretty basic combat. But one thing it did get right was the online multiplayer function, which allowed players to verse each other from across the world in surprisingly fun fights.

Which is why it was all the more annoying when pla💦yers started cheating the system to maintain their positive rankings. When facing a loss, certain players would simply disconnect their system from the Internet so that it wouldn’t get recorded and they would look cool on the leaderboard. Thankfully, Capcom kept track of the players who did this too much, and put them on a special server full of others who rage-quit too much. Does anyone ever win a match in this situation?

9 Afterlife Will Use The Force To Destroy You

Via: Highretrogamelord (YouTube)

Afterlife is a bizarre video game which꧒ essentially plays out like a religious version ൩of SimCity. The player plays the role of a Dem🍬iurge, whose task is to build the cities of Heaven an🦩d Hell to reward or punish the citizens of the world. Yes, Hell is meant to be a fully functioning city, and the residents may get annoyed at you if their hot water is turned off.

The game is full of satiricaꦑl pop culture references about things like Quentin Tarantino, and the allusions don't stop when it comes to hacking. The game will accept a certain amount of cheat codes before turning on you, but if you use too many a suspiciously fami🍒liar large round spaceship that for legal reasons definitely can’t be the Death Star will come and start destroying citi♍es. That’s one way to level the playing field.

8 H1Z1 Will Require Your Apology On The Int🍰ernet For P🌟erpetuity

Via: 2P.com

You may not have heard of H1Z1, the open-world crafting zombie-themed MMO, but it was marred by a pretty weak launch which involved login issues 🐼for most players, framerate disruption, and some dreadful AI. Probably because of this dodgy coding, the game was also victim to a bunch of exploits that allowed players to shoot through walls, become i🌟nvincible and receive unlimited ammo.

Instead of fixing these exploits, the H1Z1 team instead simply banned everyone found to be using them, which amounted to roughly 30 000 people. They further said that they would only consider lifting the bans for players who uploaded a YouTube video🥂 of themselves apologizing, presumably to prove their sincerity. Sadly, the three (yes, that’s a serious number) people who did actually upload apologies were rejected by the developers, who even made their own video mocking the excuses they were given. Burn.

7 Guild Wars 2 Will Force You To Commit Suicide

Like many MMOs, Guild Wars 2 has suffered from its fair share of hackers, many of whom reached god-like status𒐪 by granting themselves the ability to deal impossible amounts of damage and then teleport away to avoid reciprocation.

But unlike other ﷺMMOs, Guild Wars 2 chooses to deal with its hackers in a particularly brutal, if completely justified fashion. When the user DarkSide was caught playing god on a video which was later uploaded to YouTube, developers took swift action to take him down. They took over his character while DarkSide sat helplessly watching, and walked it to the top of a high tower. They then stripped the character naked, made it wave to onlookers, and jumped the character to its dea♛th. Instead of allowing him to respawn, they also logged DarkSide out and deleted his character permanently, along with those on his side-accounts. Justice was officially served.

6 Slender: The Arrival Will Creep You Out Even More

Via: DumeeGamer.com

You may not have played Slender: The Arrival, but you almost definitely heard of it. The game blew up for approximately five minutes on🦩line after people on YouTube and Twitch started dramatically reacting to playth💝roughs of it in which they were almost always terrified by the antagonistic Slenderman of folklore.

And naturally, there were those who found a way to beat the system. Some players figured out that by reaching a certain wall in the game, they could walk outside the boundaries of where Slenderman could appear, thus avoiding him indefinitely. After developers heard about this, they released an update to the game which made anyone who walked through the wall fall to their death. Even worse, pl🔴ayers will be faced by Slenderman alongside the message, “Not even a bug in this game will save you from me.” At least it would make for a good reaction video!