Anyone shopping for a multi-game cheat shortlist has run into both names. LaviCheats and SkyCheats sit in the same tier of the market. Big catalogs, years of operation, active forums, mixed-but-public reviews. Picking between them mostly comes down to what you actually play and how you prefer to pay. Here is the honest read on each, plus the criteria that actually matter once you have spent money on either.

What each provider is known for
LaviCheats
LaviCheats has been around for years and resells a wide stack of third party loaders. Their storefront covers Fortnite, Apex, Warzone, Rust, R6, EFT, CS2, and a long tail of smaller titles. The catalog is the selling point. If you bounce between games on the same week, one account often covers all of them.
Prices skew toward the higher end of the market. A one month subscription on a popular game runs in the $50 to $90 range depending on which loader you pick. Day and week options exist but are not always offered for every product. Support runs through a ticket panel and Discord.
SkyCheats
SkyCheats positions itself around bundle pricing. The headline products are Warzone, Fortnite, Apex, and Valorant via a few partner loaders. They run frequent sales and try to win on price per day rather than feature depth. Their forum is smaller than Lavi's but active enough.
Reputation is more divided. Some buyers report fast delivery and good uptime. Others complain about loaders going down for stretches during big patches and slow refunds. Both kinds of review are easy to find if you search the usual forums.
The criteria that actually matter
Picking a provider by catalog size is a beginner move. Once you have used a cheat for more than a month, you start caring about five things.
Update turnaround
The single biggest variable. A loader that goes down for three days after every Fortnite patch is useless no matter how cheap it is. Both Lavi and Sky resell other people's products, so update speed depends on the underlying developer, not the storefront. Read the status forum for whichever specific loader you plan to buy. The brand on the receipt is less important than the dev behind that one product.
Feature set
ESP and aimbot are table stakes. The real differentiators are streamproof rendering, a working HWID spoofer, exploits beyond aimbot, and a config system that lets you save loadouts. Lavi tends to list features in more detail on each product page. Sky's listings are sparser, which can mean either "this product does less" or "the page is just thin", and you find out which after you pay.
Refund policy
Both providers technically offer refunds. Both make it conditional. Typical rules: refund only if the product never delivered, only within 24 hours, only if a status post confirms a global outage. Charge backs through PayPal exist but get your account flagged. Read the policy before you check out, not after.
Payment options
Lavi accepts crypto, card processors through a third party, and PayPal in some regions. Sky leans on crypto and gift card processors. Crypto is the only fully reliable path on either site because card processors drop these merchants without notice.
Community reputation
Both have older threads on UnknownCheats and Reddit. Neither has a clean record. That is normal for the space. What you want to spot is consistency. Are people complaining about the same one loader, or about the storefront's refund handling, or about the whole stack going dark for a week. Pattern matters more than any single review.
Where the two diverge
LaviCheats is the safer default if you play five different games and want one bill. The catalog is deeper. The product pages are more detailed. The price tag reflects that. You are paying for breadth.
SkyCheats is the budget play if you have one main game and want the cheapest viable option for it. The risk is higher variance on update speed and support response. The reward is a lower monthly cost. Whether that math works depends on the specific loader they ship for your game.
Neither is a scam. Neither is bulletproof. Both have customers who renew for years and customers who left angry. The right answer is to pick the one whose specific product for your specific game has the best recent track record on a public forum.
Where Vantage fits
If your game is Fortnite specifically, the calculation changes. A focused provider that ships one product for one game does not have to spread engineering across ten loaders. Updates land faster. Support knows the game.
Vantage sells FN Vantage. One product, Fortnite only. ESP, aimbot, exploits, built-in HWID spoofer, streamproof. Windows 10 and 11. Updates ship within hours of every Fortnite patch because there is no other product competing for dev time.
The pricing is structured for low commitment. Day pass at $6.69. Three days at $14. One week at $27.99. One month at $67.99. Lifetime at $269.99. Payment is crypto with auto-delivery, PayPal F&F with manual review under an hour, or gift cards from Paysafecard, Steam, Razer Gold, Apple, Google Play, and Amazon. Support replies on tickets within hours.
If you play Fortnite and only Fortnite, paying for a broad multi-game catalog is paying for products you will never load. A day pass at Vantage costs less than the difference between Lavi's and Sky's monthly Fortnite plans. Try it for an evening. If it does not click, you spent the price of a sandwich.