“Session’s over,” she said.
Detective Lena Marchek of the Interpol Cyber-Forgery Unit hated two things: unfinished cases and bad guitar tone. So when a wave of perfectly counterfeited vintage Mexican Stratocasters started surfacing in underground markets from Lyon to Osaka, she had both problems at once. Rocksmith 2014 Edition Remastered Interpol
Her partner, a lanky tech analyst named Ollie, leaned over. “So the bad guys are using a rhythm game to move contraband?” “Session’s over,” she said
“But I almost have the bass path at 95%.” Her partner, a lanky tech analyst named Ollie, leaned over
The trail led to a warehouse in Antwerp. Inside, a dozen monitors displayed nothing but Rocksmith 2014 ’s main menu. A man known as “The Fretboard” sat in a gaming chair, a plastic Realtone cable plugged into his laptop instead of a guitar.
Marchek booted up her undercover gaming rig—a beat-up PS4 in a Paris safe house—and loaded the file. The game’s note highway scrolled, but the performance data was wrong. The “tone” parameters in the game’s virtual pedalboard weren’t just distorted; they contained steganographic code. Buried inside a digital "Dumble Overdrive" pedal was a manifest of shipping routes, encrypted with the game’s session ID as the key.