As far as I can tell you can do anything with it. 'I tried it out, didn’t like it after a while… I don't find it fun and I find it confusing, what's so great about killing someone in a game like that? “People don't find cheating in CS:GO fun for instance,' he says over Discord. But as he admits, “it's more complicated than that.” This would seem a disingenuous answer from somebody who broadcasts himself hurling magical flameballs that fly through walls and transform players' heads into giant, grotesque eggs. “I always say this to people that ask,” he tells me, “but every time they release a game I honestly wish they would have good anti-cheat.” I spoke to Malcolm Reynolds about why he does all this. He also has a history of getting people “softbanned”, which means their save file is flagged and they can only play with a small pool of other players (others who’ve been softbanned). Malcolm Reynolds, who is known to players from his exploits in other Dark Souls games, was invading players and throwing an accursed, hacked fireball at them, which inflicts diseases and a curse that makes the game even more difficult. Pain and purgatory simulator Dark Souls: Remastered was released a couple of weeks ago, and within hours it was already the playground of a well-known hacker.