The phrase “to cheat ON” can be used either
- in regard to a test, quiz, exam: “She cheated on the midterm, and still only got a D”, or
- to talk about someone being unfaithful to somone else: “She cheated on him, so he broke up with her.” You wouldn’t really say that someone cheated on someTHING (in terms of being unfaithful) unless you were trying to be funny or poetic.
As far as “to cheat AT” goes, you would simply say, “He is cheating at Uno” or “…at tennis” or “…at backgammon”; no need to add “the game” as that is already implied.