Using an aimbot too aggressively is the most common reason players get banned. Anti-cheat systems and human reviewers both look for the same things: unnatural aim speed, perfect accuracy, and movement patterns that no human could produce. This page covers how to configure and use the aimbot in a way that keeps you under the radar.Documentation Index
Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.exploits.gg/llms.txt
Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.
Video guide
The following video walks through the most common ways players are caught and how to avoid them: Watch: Hiding Aimbot GuideKey settings to adjust
Increase smoothness
Increase smoothness
High smoothness is the single most effective change you can make. A low-smoothness aimbot snaps to targets instantly — that’s a pattern no human produces and it’s exactly what server-side checks look for.Set smoothness high enough that your aim movement looks gradual and natural. The trade-off is slightly slower target acquisition, but the detection risk drops significantly.
Use a non-RMB keybind for aimbot
Use a non-RMB keybind for aimbot
If your aimbot activates every time you aim (right mouse button), it’s active constantly — and that constant tracking is easy to flag.Binding your aimbot to a different key (like a side mouse button or a keyboard key) lets you activate it selectively. Only trigger it when you actually need it, not on every enemy you look near.
Enable visibility check
Enable visibility check
Always enable the visibility check. Locking onto enemies through walls is one of the clearest behavioral signals to both anti-cheat systems and players watching kill cams.
Use body targeting over head
Use body targeting over head
Consistent headshots at range — especially on moving targets — is statistically impossible and quickly raises flags in automated systems. Targeting the chest or body produces more realistic accuracy numbers.
Keep FOV reasonable
Keep FOV reasonable
A very large FOV means the aimbot snaps to enemies far from your crosshair. This produces large, fast aim corrections that look nothing like human movement. Use the smallest FOV that still helps you play effectively.
Behavioral tips
Beyond the settings, how you play matters:- Don’t track targets through walls — even if you know where they are, don’t pre-aim perfectly
- Miss shots occasionally — perfect accuracy over an entire session is a statistical impossibility for humans
- Vary your reaction times — always reacting at the same speed makes you look like a machine
- Don’t rage hack — playing obviously and getting reported triggers manual review, which is harder to beat than automated systems