Own the unlimited power of cloud-based collaborative measuring anywhere, anytime in Measure Map Online.
Have your own storage bucket, organize your projects in folders in your account that can be accessed from any device at anytime.
Get Started
Once you're in a project, hold down your key or right-click your mouse to toggle the Crosshair and start measuring.
Learn More
Have multiple measurements on the map by simply locking a polygon to create a new one. Keep repeating the process and you'll have all of your areas and distances measured on one single map.
Learn More
Share projects with your colleagues and clients instantly with a link and choose who can edit and who can view with our advanced sharing permissions settings.
Learn More
All changes are automatically saved to the cloud so you can access them from any other device. Work on shared projects with your colleagues in real-time, Google Docs style.
Learn MoreStay ahead of the game, make faster measurements and proposals
Get everything Measure Map has to offer. No additional charge. Choose the most suitable plan for you.
* Get a 30-day FREE Trial, no payment method required. hanbot bypass
* Terms are subject to change. Over the last four years, the cheating underground
Over the last four years, the cheating underground has developed several distinct methods to bypass detection. Each has its own lifespan (measured in weeks or months) before Blizzard patches it.
While developers often claim their bypasses are "undiscovered" (UD), using them carries significant risks:
The analysis revealed that TenProtect relied heavily on user-mode API calls to collect machine information. The bypass simply intercepted these at the most vulnerable point, completely neutralizing the anti-cheat's ability to fingerprint the machine. As the author noted: "At the API level, it's far easier to hook because these function addresses are fixed, whereas hooking inside the game module requires finding offsets with each update and risks triggering CRC checks".
Over the last four years, the cheating underground has developed several distinct methods to bypass detection. Each has its own lifespan (measured in weeks or months) before Blizzard patches it.
While developers often claim their bypasses are "undiscovered" (UD), using them carries significant risks:
The analysis revealed that TenProtect relied heavily on user-mode API calls to collect machine information. The bypass simply intercepted these at the most vulnerable point, completely neutralizing the anti-cheat's ability to fingerprint the machine. As the author noted: "At the API level, it's far easier to hook because these function addresses are fixed, whereas hooking inside the game module requires finding offsets with each update and risks triggering CRC checks".