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One-Click Hardware ID Change
TraceX modifies all hardware identifiers on your PC in a single automated operation. It changes motherboard serials, CPU IDs, GPU device identifiers, RAM module serials, and BIOS UUIDs without requiring any manual registry editing or hardware replacement. The entire process is handled by an intelligent batch system that detects your hardware configuration and applies the appropriate changes automatically.
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Disk Drive Serial Spoofing
Every hard drive and solid-state drive carries a unique serial number that can be read by software to identify your machine. TraceX replaces HDD and SSD serial numbers at the system level so that any application querying your storage devices will see entirely new identifiers. This covers both SATA and NVMe drives across all major manufacturers including Samsung, Western Digital, Seagate, and Kingston.
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MAC Address Spoofing
Your network adapter has a unique Media Access Control address that can be used as a fingerprint. TraceX spoofs the MAC address on all network interfaces, including Ethernet adapters, Wi-Fi cards, and virtual network bridges. The new MAC address persists through system restarts and remains active until you decide to revert it using the built-in restore function.
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Peripheral ID Modification
Monitors, keyboards, mice, headsets, and other USB peripherals all carry unique serial numbers and device identifiers that anti-cheat systems can read. TraceX modifies these peripheral identifiers, including monitor EDID data, USB device serial strings, and HID device descriptors, so your entire hardware profile appears to be a completely different system.
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Advanced Registry Editing
Windows stores hardware identifiers across dozens of registry keys in locations like HKLM\SYSTEM, HKLM\HARDWARE, and HKLM\SOFTWARE. TraceX performs deep registry modifications that cover all critical keys where hardware IDs are cached. This includes MachineGuid, ProductId, InstallDate, HardwareConfig entries, and numerous other fingerprint-related values that standard tools typically miss.
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EFI and TPM Spoofing
For aggressive bans that read firmware-level identifiers, TraceX offers advanced EFI boot variable spoofing and TPM key modification. These deep-level changes alter identifiers that survive operating system reinstalls. EFI variable randomization ensures that even UEFI-aware detection systems see a fresh hardware profile. TPM key modification resets the trusted platform module identifier that some systems use as part of their fingerprinting.