: Mods that add high-definition black roads or change environmental textures like yellow road stripes.
Unlock all vanity items (tires, underglow, smoke, horns) without paying Crew Credits.
The response from Ivory Tower and publisher Ubisoft has been predictably severe, yet perpetually reactive. Because The Crew 2 is an "always-online" title, any client-side modification violates the Terms of Service. The developers employ anti-cheat software like BattlEye, which scans for known menu signatures and issues hardware bans to offenders. However, this is a digital arms race. Mod menu developers reverse-engineer the anti-cheat, creating paid subscription services for their cheats—often costing more than the game itself—that offer "undetectable" features for weeks or months until the next ban wave. This cycle creates a black market economy around the game, where maintaining a "clean" high-level account becomes a commodity. The irony is stark: while mod menus circumvent the game’s microtransactions, they fuel a parallel, unregulated economy of cheating software.
Which of these would you like?
If you want the feeling of a mod menu without losing your account, consider these legitimate alternatives:
The base game requires Buck$ to fast travel. A mod menu removes that cost entirely.
