Evolution Of Hacking
Posted: Tue Sep 07, 2010 6:27 pm
Hello, I am Rosey and here's a brief introduction of myself: I've been hacking MapleStory for well over 5 years. I've seen it evolve from it's beta stages and what it has become today. Of course, one can never compare the present with the past because well, what's the past will remain in the past. But there are lessons that each and everyone can learn from the past which would help shape our future.
I've also witnessed how MapleStory hacking has evolved from selfless sharing to "let's not share this lest it gets patched". It's not that I am heavily against the whole act of "secret keeping" but let's all do a quick rewind to 2005 shall we?
Late 2004 to 2005: MapleStory beta. Introduced by nexon to the rest of the world. This was when I first started MapleStory. A simple yet alluring game. But it gets boring after awhile. There were as many warriors as there were thieves and training was a hassle. And then to the hacking scene: CEF was the brain of maplestory hacking. Back then, if I remember correctly, MapleStory wasn't split up into GMS and MSEA. We were one. Everyone was satisfied with wall vac even though it fails miserably at vaccing at maps with multiple platforms. Botting at stirges was the way to go. I can still remember checking on my bot ever so often during Chinese new year. Hacks were extremely simple; get cheatengine and hack away. Tutorials were in abundance. Then shit started turning bad. The infamous wall vac had finally been patched and it was also at that time when the most primitive form of anti hack was introduced.
But this didn't deter the brilliant minds at CEF. The MapleStory section quickly became the most active forum back at CEF. With every patch, you could expect at least 1 hack to get patched. And because of this, better and newer hacks were created that made levelling comparable to opening notepad. Time to pause and ask yourself: What caused the hacks to get patched so quickly? Was it the leaking of hacks everyday at CEF? Yes, it definitely was. Everyone knew that amongst all the hackers, the GMs of MapleStory were also actively browsing the forum. Leaking of hacks soon became a very big problem. But if you were to visit CEF everyday, people there never stopped leaking hacks. Because to them, it wasn't leaking. It was sharing.
Maybe it's because of the different ways we were all brought up. While most Asians strive to be the best of the best, Caucasians tend to be pretty much satisfied if everyone around them was happy. The spirit at CEF was such. It did not take long for Nexon/Wizet to introduce GameGuard to MapleStory. It was the moment we all dreaded. This was when the hacking scene started crumbling, and the golden era was over.
People still shared various ways to bypass GameGuard and the spirit at CEF still remained unchanged. However, many brilliant minds decided that they were done with MapleStory and moved on. The hacking community split, and came the birth of many other hacking forums.
Fast forward to 2007 and 2008: It has been a long and arduous journey for the hacking community. People came and gone. Hacks have been patched and new ones discovered. And it was 2008 when one of the most outrageous method of hacking became public; packet editing and a worthy mention: PG hack. Getting to level 70 takes minutes from level 31. Although I wasn't active during that period of time, It wouldn't take a genius to realise that MapleStory had been utterly destroyed by packet editing.
Everything became so fast paced one could never catch up with it. It's like a cheetah trying to run at the speed of light. As fast as it might be, it can never match the speed of light even at it's maximum potential. It was the usual routine; hacks released > quickly patched > yet more hacks > and patched again. Then everything died down. MapleSEA hacking was literally dead. Wz editing became the only public way to hack. But there was a silver lining to all this; rapidfire skill editing. I was quick to hop into the bandwagon and quickly rosed to the top of the rankings in Fornax with a friend. It was great while it lasted.
I hope that whoever reads this gets my point. MapleStory hacking has come a long way and it has never died. Many undiscovered and unexploited ways of hacking remains. I am pretty disappointed with the current MapleSEA hacking community because it has become "every man for himself". However, I see great potential in Xemectrum. Great minds here lurking around us. I want to stay on here and see what happens and will be writing a pretty comprehensive tutorial on iMax Macro. To quote boredness: Sharing is caring.
Think about it: If hacks were never leaked nor patched, we would still be using that son of a fail wall vac right now. Leaking, has played a big role in the discovery of new hacks. Leaking was never 100% bad. There is still a silver lining in every leak.
Cheers
I've also witnessed how MapleStory hacking has evolved from selfless sharing to "let's not share this lest it gets patched". It's not that I am heavily against the whole act of "secret keeping" but let's all do a quick rewind to 2005 shall we?
Late 2004 to 2005: MapleStory beta. Introduced by nexon to the rest of the world. This was when I first started MapleStory. A simple yet alluring game. But it gets boring after awhile. There were as many warriors as there were thieves and training was a hassle. And then to the hacking scene: CEF was the brain of maplestory hacking. Back then, if I remember correctly, MapleStory wasn't split up into GMS and MSEA. We were one. Everyone was satisfied with wall vac even though it fails miserably at vaccing at maps with multiple platforms. Botting at stirges was the way to go. I can still remember checking on my bot ever so often during Chinese new year. Hacks were extremely simple; get cheatengine and hack away. Tutorials were in abundance. Then shit started turning bad. The infamous wall vac had finally been patched and it was also at that time when the most primitive form of anti hack was introduced.
But this didn't deter the brilliant minds at CEF. The MapleStory section quickly became the most active forum back at CEF. With every patch, you could expect at least 1 hack to get patched. And because of this, better and newer hacks were created that made levelling comparable to opening notepad. Time to pause and ask yourself: What caused the hacks to get patched so quickly? Was it the leaking of hacks everyday at CEF? Yes, it definitely was. Everyone knew that amongst all the hackers, the GMs of MapleStory were also actively browsing the forum. Leaking of hacks soon became a very big problem. But if you were to visit CEF everyday, people there never stopped leaking hacks. Because to them, it wasn't leaking. It was sharing.
Maybe it's because of the different ways we were all brought up. While most Asians strive to be the best of the best, Caucasians tend to be pretty much satisfied if everyone around them was happy. The spirit at CEF was such. It did not take long for Nexon/Wizet to introduce GameGuard to MapleStory. It was the moment we all dreaded. This was when the hacking scene started crumbling, and the golden era was over.
People still shared various ways to bypass GameGuard and the spirit at CEF still remained unchanged. However, many brilliant minds decided that they were done with MapleStory and moved on. The hacking community split, and came the birth of many other hacking forums.
Fast forward to 2007 and 2008: It has been a long and arduous journey for the hacking community. People came and gone. Hacks have been patched and new ones discovered. And it was 2008 when one of the most outrageous method of hacking became public; packet editing and a worthy mention: PG hack. Getting to level 70 takes minutes from level 31. Although I wasn't active during that period of time, It wouldn't take a genius to realise that MapleStory had been utterly destroyed by packet editing.
Everything became so fast paced one could never catch up with it. It's like a cheetah trying to run at the speed of light. As fast as it might be, it can never match the speed of light even at it's maximum potential. It was the usual routine; hacks released > quickly patched > yet more hacks > and patched again. Then everything died down. MapleSEA hacking was literally dead. Wz editing became the only public way to hack. But there was a silver lining to all this; rapidfire skill editing. I was quick to hop into the bandwagon and quickly rosed to the top of the rankings in Fornax with a friend. It was great while it lasted.
I hope that whoever reads this gets my point. MapleStory hacking has come a long way and it has never died. Many undiscovered and unexploited ways of hacking remains. I am pretty disappointed with the current MapleSEA hacking community because it has become "every man for himself". However, I see great potential in Xemectrum. Great minds here lurking around us. I want to stay on here and see what happens and will be writing a pretty comprehensive tutorial on iMax Macro. To quote boredness: Sharing is caring.
Think about it: If hacks were never leaked nor patched, we would still be using that son of a fail wall vac right now. Leaking, has played a big role in the discovery of new hacks. Leaking was never 100% bad. There is still a silver lining in every leak.
Cheers