This dynamic raises a question: Should players need to use command-line scripts to fix a consumer game? Ideally, Riot’s uninstaller would perform this cleanup automatically. However, due to the kernel's persistence, no standard uninstaller can delete a driver currently loaded in memory. Thus, VALORANT CLEANER.bat exists as a necessary artifact of the cat-and-mouse game between cheat developers and security engineers.
: It would sweep through the system's temporary folders, removing clutter that might be slowing down the OS. Flushing DNS
Once upon a time in the digital world of competitive gaming, there was a dedicated player named lived for the thrill of VALORANT CLEANER.bat
As long as Vanguard continues to operate at the deepest levels of the OS, the humble batch file will remain an essential, albeit unofficial, scalpel in the player’s troubleshooting toolkit—a reminder that even in a world of kernel drivers and TPM 2.0, sometimes a text file with a .bat extension is the most powerful tool you have.
Copy and paste the following safe, standard Windows cleanup script into your Notepad document: This dynamic raises a question: Should players need
If you are a seasoned VALORANT player, you have likely encountered the dreaded spiral of performance degradation. One week, your game runs at a buttery 240 FPS; the next, you’re facing mysterious stutters, Vanguard errors, or disk write failures. In the darkest corners of Reddit and YouTube tutorials, a cryptic solution emerges: the VALORANT CLEANER.bat file.
If you are experiencing performance issues or errors, it is safer to perform a : Thus, VALORANT CLEANER
echo. echo Restarting Vanguard... sc start vgk >nul 2>&1 sc start vgc >nul 2>&1