Bungie's upcoming first-person PvEvP extraction shooter, Marathon, will be out on PC, PS5, and Xbox Series X/S in a little more than a week from the time of this writing, and as you might expect, there has been a lot of communication and marketing from the team as we get closer to the game's release.
The most recent of which arrived today, in the form of a new blog post on the official Bungie website, all to do with the game's networking and security. The blog post highlights the game's dedicated server networking and how elements like Fog of War limit the usability of things like wall-hacks, while also explaining what happens if you find yourself disconnected from a game.
One point it hammers home, though, is that if you are caught cheating in Marathon, you are forever banned from the game. "Anyone found to be cheating will be permabanned from playing Marathon forever, no second chances," the blog post reads in its initial bullet-point summary.
"We are taking a strong stance against cheating," the post adds towards the end of the blog post, "and anyone found to be cheating or developing cheats will be permanently banned from playing Marathon forever, no second chances."
"That said, no system is perfect, so we will have an appeals system to monitor for any issues in detection." So if you are mistakenly banned for cheating, you will have the chance to regain access to Marathon, but it seems like Bungie is doing its best to take a hardcore stance against cheaters in its upcoming shooter.
Which is understandable, considering how toxic cheaters can be to a multiplayer community. Once enough of them begin to crop up in lobbies, it makes the idea of going back to the game for players who don't want to cheat impossible to consider. It doesn't even have to be that you experience cheaters in every match you play; sometimes, all it takes is consistently running into cheaters all at once in a single session for players to have seen enough evidence that cheaters are ruining their gameplay experience.
Marathon arrives on PC and current-gen consoles on March 5, 2026, and if you're looking to try it out before dropping $40 to buy it, you'll be able to try it out on your platform of choice this coming weekend, starting on February 26, during its open-preview server slam test.
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