Following the patch:
As of April 2026:
To understand the patch, you first have to understand the ecosystem. codm gameloop bypass patched
The "Bypass" was a method (usually involving editing registry files, changing device IDs, or using third-party scripts) to trick the CoDM anti-cheat into thinking your PC was actually an iPhone or Samsung Galaxy.
The result? A PC player with 144 FPS, a 360Hz monitor, and a mechanical keyboard would be dropped into a lobby full of thumbs-on-glass casuals. It wasn’t cheating in the aimbot sense, but it was competitive exploitation. The advantage was massive. Following the patch: As of April 2026 :
Tencent’s anti-cheat system, which previously tolerated the unofficial bypass as a "gray area," has now fully patched the exploit. Gameloop users who attempt the old workaround are met with instant error codes, login failures, or—worse—shadow bans that place them in lobbies with actual cheaters.
The official statement is clear: Emulator players are now permanently segregated into their own matchmaking pool. No more mixing with mobile-only lobbies. The "Bypass" was a method (usually involving editing
Several factors motivated this hard-line approach:
The "Bypass" wasn't new. It has existed in various forms since 2020. So, why did the patch stick now?
GameLoop is the official emulator. When players use a bypass, they aren't using GameLoop’s proprietary matchmaking. They are using GameLoop as a Trojan horse. This costs Tencent money (ad revenue, skin sales from frustrated mobile players quitting) and damages the integrity of their flagship mobile esport.
Use Steam Link or Windows Phone Link to mirror your actual phone to your PC monitor. You are still technically using touch controls (you click with a mouse on a touch screen overlay), but the game sees it as a mobile device.