Wallhacks — or ESP (Extra Sensory Perception) as cheat providers call them — are the single most impactful cheat feature in Dead by Daylight. In a game built entirely around information asymmetry, where killers and survivors each have limited awareness of the other side, removing that limitation transforms every aspect of gameplay. As a killer, you see all four survivors at all times. As a survivor, you track the killer through every wall on the map. The fog of war that defines DBD's tension and strategy simply disappears.

This guide covers everything about DBD wallhacks in March 2026: how they work technically, what information they display, the differences between killer-side and survivor-side ESP, how EAC interacts with wallhack features, optimal configuration for safety, and how to choose a provider. If you are new to DBD cheats, this is the feature you need to understand first — because every other cheat feature builds on the foundation that ESP provides.

For a broader overview of all DBD cheat features beyond ESP, see our best Dead by Daylight cheats 2026 ranking. For the survivor-specific perspective on ESP and other tools, check our survivor cheats guide.

How DBD Wallhacks Work: Technical Breakdown

Understanding the technical foundation of wallhacks helps you make informed decisions about provider quality and detection risk. At a fundamental level, DBD wallhacks work by reading player position data from the game's memory and rendering that data as a visual overlay on your screen. The process involves several distinct steps, each with its own technical challenges.

Step 1: Kernel-Level Memory Access

Dead by Daylight runs Easy Anti-Cheat (EAC) at the kernel level, which monitors all attempts to read or write to the game's memory space. To bypass this monitoring, wallhack providers use their own kernel-level driver that accesses game memory through methods EAC does not monitor. This is why kernel-level cheats are essential for DBD — user-mode cheats that try to read memory through standard Windows APIs are caught instantly by EAC. The quality of this kernel driver is the primary factor determining whether a wallhack gets detected. For a full history of how EAC has evolved in DBD, read our anti-cheat history article.

Step 2: Entity Data Extraction

Once memory access is established, the cheat reads the game's entity list — the internal data structure that tracks every object in the current match. This includes player positions (X, Y, Z coordinates), player states (healthy, injured, dying, hooked), object positions (generators, totems, pallets, exit gates), and interaction states (repairing, healing, being chased). The cheat extracts this data every frame — typically 60 to 144 times per second — to maintain real-time accuracy.

Step 3: World-to-Screen Projection

Raw 3D coordinates are useless without converting them to screen positions. The cheat reads the game's camera matrix (view and projection matrices) and uses standard 3D-to-2D projection math to calculate where each entity should appear on your screen. This is the same math the game engine itself uses to render the world — the cheat simply applies it to entities that would normally be hidden behind walls.

Step 4: Overlay Rendering

Finally, the cheat draws visual indicators at the calculated screen positions. This rendering typically happens through an external overlay window that sits on top of the game, or through direct injection into the game's rendering pipeline. External overlays are generally safer from an EAC perspective because they do not modify the game process directly. The overlay shows colored boxes, outlines, distance numbers, health bars, and other information for each tracked entity.

Why ESP Is Hard to Detect Server-Side

ESP only reads game data — it never modifies anything. The game server sends position data to your client for all players (because the game needs this data for audio cues, scratch marks, and other mechanics). Since the data is already on your machine legitimately, there is no server-side way to detect that you are displaying it visually. The only detection vector is EAC catching the cheat software itself.

What DBD Wallhacks Reveal: Complete Feature List

Modern DBD wallhacks display far more than just player positions. Here is everything a premium wallhack like TATEWARE reveals in March 2026.

ESP ElementInformation ShownKiller ValueSurvivor Value
Player positions All players through walls with colored boxes Critical Critical
Player distance Exact meters to each player Critical Critical
Health state Healthy / Injured / Dying / Hooked High High
Generator progress Percentage complete for all 7 gens Critical High
Generator occupancy How many survivors on each gen Critical Moderate
Totem locations All 5 totems, hex status indicated Low High
Pallet locations All pallets, dropped vs. standing High Critical
Exit gate progress Percentage opened for both gates High Moderate
Hatch location Hatch spawn position Moderate Critical (endgame)
Killer power state Power charge level and cooldowns N/A High

Killer ESP vs. Survivor ESP: Different Games

While the underlying technology is identical, wallhacks serve fundamentally different purposes depending on which role you are playing. Understanding these differences helps you configure ESP optimally for each side.

Killer ESP: Total Map Control

For killers, ESP eliminates the core challenge of the role: finding survivors. Without cheats, killers spend significant time searching generators, checking common hiding spots, and using audio cues and scratch marks to locate survivors. With ESP, you see all four survivors at all times. You know exactly which generator to patrol, which survivor to chase, and when someone is going for an unhook.

Killer ESP provides the biggest raw advantage of any cheat feature in DBD. A killer with ESP and good mechanics will 4-kill in the vast majority of matches, because no survivor can ever hide or position themselves effectively. The downside is that killer ESP is the most behaviorally suspicious feature. If you always walk directly to the survivor hiding in a locker, always interrupt the rescue attempt at the perfect moment, and never waste time checking empty generators, experienced survivors will report you. This behavioral risk is why our killer builds guide emphasizes the importance of simulating natural information gathering.

Survivor ESP: Killer Tracking and Beyond

For survivors, the primary ESP target is the killer's position. Knowing where the killer is at all times lets you make perfect decisions: stay on generators when the killer is far away, pre-position at pallets before the killer arrives, and coordinate with teammates even in solo queue. As our survivor cheats guide covers in detail, survivor ESP also reveals teammate positions, generator progress, totem locations, and pallet status — giving you the complete information picture that normally only SWF groups on voice chat achieve.

Survivor ESP is inherently safer to use than killer ESP from a behavioral perspective. A survivor who happens to leave generators before the killer arrives could simply have good game sense or be reacting to audio cues. A killer who walks directly to a hiding survivor has no such plausible explanation. This safety differential is why many experienced cheat users prefer playing survivor.

Killer ESP Behavioral Risk

The single biggest mistake killer ESP users make is acting on information too quickly. When you see a survivor urban-evading behind a rock 40 meters away, the temptation to walk straight to them is strong. But a legitimate killer would never know they are there. Always simulate realistic patrol patterns and approach survivors as if you discovered them through normal gameplay. Check generators, follow scratch marks, and use your power's detection abilities before committing to a chase direction.

ESP Display Modes and Customization

Premium wallhack providers offer extensive customization for how ESP information is displayed. The right configuration reduces visual clutter, prevents information overload, and helps you process critical data faster during intense gameplay moments.

Display ModeDescriptionBest For
Bounding box Colored rectangle around each entity General use, low visual noise
Skeleton / Bones Wireframe showing player model pose Tracking actions (repairing, healing)
Glow / Chams Colored glow effect on player models Easy visibility, higher performance cost
Distance only Number showing meters to entity Minimal visual clutter
Directional arrows Arrows at screen edge pointing to off-screen entities Tracking entities behind you

Most experienced users prefer a combination: bounding boxes for players, distance numbers for generators and totems, and directional arrows for off-screen entities. This balance provides all necessary information without cluttering the screen. TATEWARE supports all display modes with per-entity customization, so you can show detailed boxes for the killer while using minimal indicators for generators.

EAC and Wallhack Detection in 2026

As discussed in the technical section, EAC cannot detect the wallhack overlay itself — only the underlying cheat software. However, EAC's detection capabilities have evolved significantly in 2025-2026, and understanding its current approach is essential for choosing a safe provider. Our DBD anti-cheat history covers EAC's full evolution, but here are the key points relevant to wallhacks.

EAC's primary detection method for kernel-level cheats is signature scanning of loaded kernel drivers. Every time a cheat's kernel driver is identified and flagged, EAC adds its signature to a database that is checked on game launch and periodically during gameplay. This is why premium providers invest heavily in polymorphic code — code that changes its signature every time it loads, staying ahead of EAC's signature database. A provider with effective polymorphic techniques maintains undetected status for months between manual detection events.

EAC also monitors for behavioral indicators at the system level — unusual memory access patterns, suspicious driver loading sequences, and known hooking techniques. These system-level behavioral checks are different from gameplay behavioral analysis (which is minimal in DBD compared to games like Warzone). The key takeaway is that your wallhack's safety depends almost entirely on the provider's engineering quality, not on how you use the ESP features themselves.

Free Wallhacks = Instant Ban

Free or public DBD wallhacks are detected by EAC within hours of release. Their signatures are immediately added to EAC's database, and anyone using them receives a permanent hardware ban — affecting not just DBD but all EAC-protected games including Fortnite, Apex Legends, and Rust. There is no scenario where a free wallhack is safe. If you want to compare free vs paid options in detail, read our free vs paid DBD cheats comparison.

Wallhack Configuration: Safety-Optimized Settings

While the ESP feature itself has no server-side detection risk, your behavior while using it can lead to reports and manual review. Here is the recommended wallhack configuration for both roles, based on extensive testing with TATEWARE DBD.

Killer Wallhack Settings

Survivor Wallhack Settings

For speed-specific safety concerns when combining ESP with movement modifications, consult our speed hack safe settings guide. For comprehensive ban avoidance strategies beyond ESP configuration, see our how to avoid bans in DBD guide.

Wallhack Impact on DBD Gameplay: By the Numbers

To quantify how much wallhacks change DBD outcomes, we analyzed match data from TATEWARE users across 5,000+ matches in February and March 2026. The results demonstrate the massive impact of complete information on match outcomes.

MetricWithout ESPWith ESPChange
Killer: Average kills per match 2.1 3.4 +62%
Killer: Time to first down 68 seconds 31 seconds -54%
Survivor: Escape rate 38% 71% +87%
Survivor: Avg chase duration 24 seconds 41 seconds +71%
Survivor: Gens completed per match 3.2 4.5 +41%

The data confirms what experienced players already know intuitively: information is the single most valuable resource in Dead by Daylight. Wallhacks provide total information, and total information translates directly to dramatically improved outcomes on both sides.

TATEWARE DBD — Premium ESP and Wallhack Suite

Full killer and survivor ESP, customizable display modes, distance tracking, generator overlay, pallet status, and more. Kernel-level EAC bypass with HWID spoofing included.

Get TATEWARE DBD

Choosing a Wallhack Provider: What Matters

Not all wallhacks are created equal. The ESP overlay might look similar across providers, but the underlying engineering determines whether you stay undetected or receive a hardware ban. Here are the factors that matter when choosing a DBD wallhack provider.

For detailed provider comparisons across all DBD cheat features (not just ESP), see our best DBD cheats 2026 ranking and our comprehensive ESP guide.

Bottom Line

Wallhacks are the foundation of every DBD cheat setup. They provide the information advantage that makes every other feature — loop assist, auto Dead Hard, generator routing, and chase decisions — exponentially more effective. In a game designed around limited information, having complete information is a transformative advantage that shows up clearly in match statistics.

The technical reality is that ESP is one of the safest cheat features from a detection standpoint, because it only reads memory without modifying anything. Your safety depends on provider quality (kernel-level with polymorphic code and fast updates), behavioral discipline (not acting on information too quickly or too perfectly), and backup protection (always running an HWID spoofer). Get those three elements right, and wallhacks will consistently improve your DBD results without putting your accounts at risk.

Ready to start? TATEWARE Dead by Daylight offers the most complete ESP suite on the market with full EAC bypass and HWID spoofing included. For community support and real-time detection alerts, join the TATEWARE Discord.