There is a philosophical objection here. Many gamers argue that a video game should not have the authority to enforce system-wide security policies. They worry that if Riot can mandate Secure Boot, what happens if a bad actor exploits Vanguard’s kernel access? The Reality Check: It’s Working Despite the outrage, the data is undeniable. Before Vanguard and Secure Boot, VALORANT had a visible cheating problem—especially in high-ranked Immortal and Radiant lobbies. Post-implementation, public cheat forums have largely given up on developing public, undetected cheats for the game.

Check if you are running "Custom Mode" for Secure Boot. Switch it to "Standard Mode". Also, ensure your boot drive is GPT formatted (not MBR). The Future: Is This the New Normal? The Secure Boot requirement for VALORANT is not an anomaly—it is the canary in the coal mine. Microsoft already requires it for Windows 11. Epic Games is experimenting with stricter kernel enforcement for Fortnite. Even Call of Duty ’s Ricochet anti-cheat is moving toward firmware-level checks.

Some legacy motherboard utilities or fan control software rely on unsigned drivers. Enabling Secure Boot sometimes breaks these. Players with older hardware (pre-2016) often find their RGB software or overclocking profiles stop working.