Major Gaming Shift – Call of Duty & Battlefield Now Require Secure Boot to Play

PC Gaming’s New Mandate: Secure Boot Becomes Essential for AAA Titles

In a coordinated anti-cheat crackdown, Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 and Battlefield 6 will require Windows Secure Boot to run. Following Battlefield’s earlier announcement, Activision confirmed Black Ops 6/Warzone will enforce this starting Season 5 – making these the first major franchises to gate access behind this security feature.

Major Gaming Shift - Call of Duty & Battlefield Now Require Secure Boot to Play
Major Gaming Shift – Call of Duty & Battlefield Now Require Secure Boot to Play

Why Secure Boot? The Anti-Cheat Arms Race

  • Blocks Kernel-Level Cheats: Secure Boot prevents unsigned/low-level malware from loading during startup – a common cheat vector
  • Hardware-Level Security: Ensures only trusted software runs before Windows launches
  • Battlefield 6: Requires Secure Boot (no TPM) for its August 9 open beta
  • Black Ops 6: Mandates both Secure Boot AND TPM 2.0 for Season 5+

What Gamers Need to Do

  1. Check Compatibility:
    • Most modern PCs (2018+) support Secure Boot
    • TPM 2.0 required for COD (standard on Win11-ready hardware)
  2. Enable in BIOS/UEFI:
    • Restart PC > Enter BIOS (Del/F2/F10)
    • Find “Secure Boot” option (usually under Security/Boot tabs)
    • Set to “Enabled”
  3. Verify in Windows:
    • Press Win+R > type msinfo32
    • Check “Secure Boot State” says On

Security Features Explained

TechnologyFunctionImpact on Cheaters
Secure BootVerifies boot software signaturesBlocks bootkit cheats & modified drivers
TPM 2.0Encrypts keys & verifies system integrityPrevents hardware spoofing & OS tampering
Platform Config Registers (PCRs)Logs system startup stateFlags altered security settings

The Fine Print

  • Windows 10/11: Both supported (despite TPM’s Win11 association)
  • Older PCs: Systems without Secure Boot capability cannot play
  • Effectiveness: Won’t eliminate cheating but raises barrier significantly
  • Industry Trend: Expect more AAA titles to follow (Activision rolling out system notifications)

Why This Matters Now

“Cheating has evolved beyond software – we’re fighting firmware-level attacks,” explains Activision’s RICOCHET team. As Battlefield 6’s beta launches this week, early adopters must enable Secure Boot to play – making this the new normal for competitive shooters.

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The Bottom Line

Your gaming rig now needs enterprise-grade security. While inconvenient for some, this move could finally curb the cheat epidemic plaguing online shooters. Check your BIOS today – or risk being locked out of this fall’s biggest releases.

Source: callofduty

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