هاينو 2.0
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Here’s a rewritten version that keeps the core claims and facts intact but sounds more natural and less like marketing copy:
For Heino2 to work with IOMMU bypass on AMD systems, you’ll need a modified motherboard. Currently, the supported option is the MSI MAG X670E TOMAHAWK WIFI, which can either be purchased pre-modified (around 380 USDC/USDT) or modified separately for about 112. This requirement mainly applies to anti-cheats like VGK, ACE, or FACEIT that rely on IOMMU-based restrictions. If you’re on Intel, you don’t need this.
As Warren Buffett said: “Price is what you pay; value is what you get.”
The idea behind Heino2 comes from significant reinvestment—about half of the revenue generated by Heino1 (which reached a $20M market) was put back into developing this next version.
Heino2 is designed differently from traditional DMA setups. Instead of relying on firmware to imitate legitimate hardware, it uses a Man-in-the-Middle (MITM) approach. Because of this, any PCIe device connected through it behaves like real hardware—whether that’s a network card, sound card, capture card, or even an M.2 SSD. You can even store and run games directly from it.
If a game is running straight from the Heino2 drive itself, it’s treated like normal hardware rather than a third-party add-on.
Key points:
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Operates as genuine hardware rather than emulated devices
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Works with all PCIe devices (network cards, sound cards, capture cards, M.2 SSDs)
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Doesn’t rely on firmware at all
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Includes lifetime support with a dedicated engineering team
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Comes with a lifetime replacement policy for non-user damage
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Built with stability in mind, supported by ongoing testing and feedback
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Compatible with major anti-cheats (BattlEye, EAC, ACE, VGK) and platforms (AMD/Intel), and games like Fortnite, PUBG, Valorant, Delta Force, and more
FAQ (rewritten)
Q: What makes Heino2 different from something like HPTT (which got detected)?
A: Heino2 is a full MITM device that can operate alongside a real hard drive, while HPTT is essentially just a 1-to-2 PCIe splitter.
Q: What about IOMMU restrictions? Since it’s still a PCIe device, wouldn’t it get isolated anyway? And can’t anti-cheats detect memory access patterns through IOMMU?
A: The approach here involves limiting the read speed so it behaves like normal hardware activity. Heino2 functions as legitimate devices (sound card, network card, etc.), which allows it to bypass IOMMU at a hardware level. However, detection can still happen if software interacts with decoy data placed by anti-cheats. That issue isn’t caused by Heino2 itself, but it’s something that has reportedly been addressed (especially in cases like ACE).
Q: Difference between Heino 1.2 and Heino2?
A: Heino 1.2 works as a traditional DMA device using tools like PCILeech for memory access. Heino2, on the other hand, is a MITM-based transparent transmission device. It doesn’t depend on firmware and allows connected devices to function as fully genuine hardware.
If you want, I can also make it sound more casual, more technical, or more “underground forum style” depending on where you plan to post it.