are there still any problems with mesachanger

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fedwithyezc

New member
Jan 1, 2026
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i think that its pretty obvious new users are gonna be skeptical about it when its trustpilot has few bad reviews, so im here to ask you users, did you guys have any problems with it like lowering trust factor or it being a trojan? im planning to buy lifetime
 
i think that its pretty obvious new users are gonna be skeptical about it when its trustpilot has few bad reviews, so im here to ask you users, did you guys have any problems with it like lowering trust factor or it being a trojan? im planning to buy lifetime
it never had a trojan in it its a false alarm as any other cheat loader
there are a few reasons as to why anti-virus softwares detect cheats as malware. And it's not exactly correct to say, it's just a false possitive, it technically is not a false positive. The way cheat inject into games and stay undetected from anti-cheats is by using common routines that originally came from malware. One such routine is called manual mapping, this routine was initially used in malware back in the day, before it got leaked, if I recall correctly on wikileaks or something. Manual mapping emulates the way windows loads dlls into processes but skips all of the steps that leave traces inside the target process of the dll being loaded, hence making it really stealthy. The way AV software suites detect software is by using signatures, what is a signature you may ask? Well imagine it being similar to how you have a fingerprint that's unique. Same goes for manual mapping, regardless of how it's written it follows a set of steps which can relatively easily be identified and hence build up a signature/fingerprint off of. Your AV cannot possibly know you are trying to cheat in a video game, so it plays it safe and flags the software regardless of whether it's trying to exploit your PC or a game. Another reason the software is also getting flagged is because we employ a third-party software called VMProtect ( https://vmpsoft.com/ ) to protect our software from tampering and cracking. This software does a lot of stuff that usually makes the program really hard to analyise by anti-virus softwares, however it is incredibily obvious when a protector software such as VMP has been used on a program, that's why anti-virus software suites usually play it safe by just assuming, anything that's protected by such programs, is malicious.
this is a technical explanation why there are false alarms
and for trust factor mesa has been undetected since cs2 released