Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 follows Battlefield 6's lead, will also require secure boot on PC
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Summary
As previously reported, the upcoming releases of Battlefield 6 and Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 are expected to include mandatory two-factor authentication.
This will require players to enable secure booting on their PCs in order to play.
EA recently announced that the BF6 open beta would require players to delve into their BIOS to enable secure booting, and Activision has now revealed that Black Ops 6 will be doing the same.
Although the switch will not happen overnight, players who do not opt for the new secure booting and Trusted Platform Module (TPM) 2.0 requirements will be continuously served notifications and prompted to update their setup.
Activision has provided instructions on how gamers can check if their system is compatible with the new requirements, and how to enable secure booting and TPM 2.0 if it is not already enabled.
There are no plans to introduce the new requirements for the Warzone game, but this could change in the future.