It’s an idea a fair few companies have used before in websites, software, and such: hiding messages likely to only be seen by people with skills or interests that might make them valuable to you. As Motherboard report, the Packman software Riot use in several games has been found to have a little message: And Motherboard showed the message even has some ASCII art for that hacker/code cracker/slacker aesthetic:
“The hope is that people who are doing it as a hobby or because they’re curious might want a chance to do it as a career,” a Riot employee covertly told Motherboard. “And the people who are doing it to sell cheats for profit probably wouldn’t be interested.” Riot have made a big show of fighting cheats in Valorant, with their their controversial anti-cheat ‘Vanguard’ hooking deep into your PC to police it. Despite this, wrong’uns are managing to make wallhacks and aimbots for it. Cheat vs. anti-cheat is an endless arms race (still being fought with lawsuits and software in far older games) but perhaps some folks might be interested in going legit. Not as subtle as recruiting World War 2 codebreakers through the Telegraph’s cryptic crossword, mind.