Trojan code attacks are the most technically sophisticated cheating method I encounter. Unlike jammers and signal injectors that broadcast external signals, trojan code exploits vulnerabilities that exist inside the machine’s own firmware. This makes them harder to detect and harder to explain. These are the questions I get most often from operators who are trying to understand whether trojan code is affecting their fish game machines.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Can trojan code be removed by reinstalling the game software?
A: No. Trojan code in fish game machines is embedded in the boot-level firmware. A standard game reinstall does not touch this layer. This is why software-only fixes rarely work.
Q: How does AI anti-trojan defense detect these password sequences?
A: The device monitors the communication bus for signal patterns that deviate from normal gameplay. When it detects an anomaly that matches the profile of a trojan trigger, it scrambles the signal in real time, neutralizing the attack before the machine responds.
Q: Can operators test whether their machines have trojan code?
A: Basic diagnostics can reveal unusual signal patterns, but definitive detection requires monitoring the machine’s communication bus during operation. Most operators discover trojans only after installing anti-trojan hardware and checking the alert logs.
Q: Are new trojans being discovered regularly?
A: Yes. As more cheaters reverse-engineer game firmware, new trojan triggers are found. This is why hardware-level detection that monitors the bus for any unauthorized signal is superior to software-based signature matching.
Q: Is AI trojan defense worth the extra cost over standard anti-cheat?
A: For most operators, starting with a Gen2 device is the right first step. If cheating continues after Gen2 installation, upgrading to AI trojan defense targets the specific vulnerabilities that standard hardware cannot address.
Q: How quickly does AI defense learn a machine’s normal behavior?
A: The learning period is typically 7-14 days of continuous operation. During this period, the device may flag some normal variations as anomalies. After the learning period, false positives drop to near zero.
Q: Can AI defense be fooled by a cheater who gradually changes their technique?
A: A gradual change that stays within normal operational parameters would not trigger an alert. However, trojan triggers involve a sudden, specific deviation from normal patterns that falls well outside the AI’s learned baseline.
Q: Does AI trojan defense require an internet connection?
A: No. All processing happens locally on the device. It does not need to phone home for updates or analysis. This also means there is no subscription fee.
Q: What happens if the AI detects a false positive?
A: The device logs the event and you can review it. If a false positive is confirmed, the device learns from it and adjusts. The false positive rate typically drops to under 1% after the initial learning period.
Q: How do I know if I need AI defense versus standard Gen2 protection?
A: If you have confirmed cheating but a standard Gen2 device does not resolve it, or if you suspect a sophisticated attacker who has evaded other security measures, AI defense is indicated. Start with Gen2, upgrade to AI if needed.
If your fish table is showing signs of trojan code attacks, send me a message with your machine model and a photo of your setup. I will do a quick remote check for free. Every device comes with a money-back guarantee, official invoice, express shipping, and 1-on-1 technical support.
WhatsApp / WeChat / Phone: +86 158 1582 1587 — Engineer Wang
To discuss the best anti-cheat strategy for your specific arcade setup, message me directly. I offer a free remote diagnostic session — send me your machine model and I will tell you what is going on.