The four defendants operate an international cheating service called LeagueSharp (or L#) which charges a monthly fee to provide a number of cheats and automation bots to help people win matches and artificially level up accounts which are later sold to other players, according to the suit. "Among other things, enables its users to abuse LoL by allowing them to, for example, see hidden information ‘automate’ gameplay to perform in the game with enhanced or inhuman accuracy and accumulate levels, experience and items at a rate that is not possible for a normal human player," according to the lawsuit filed on Monday with the United States District Court for the Central District of California. Three German hackers are secretly behind a Peruvian corporation that runs LeagueSharp, the world’s largest League of Legends hacking and bot service, and if it’s not shut down it could spell the end of the game, according to a lawsuit filed this week by Riot Games.
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