: The footprint is negligible. It consumes less than 50MB of RAM and has no noticeable impact on CPU frames-per-second (FPS) during gameplay. Risks and Limitations
As a version 1.0 release, the tool’s scope is relatively narrow:
The utility operates as a standard memory editor or "trainer." Once launched alongside a compatible game, it identifies the memory addresses associated with currency values (gold, credits, or cash) and allows the user to lock or increment those values. Money Cheat v 1.0
: In testing, the value changes were near-instantaneous once the memory pointer was successfully hooked. Compatibility and Performance
Prospective users should be aware of the inherent trade-offs: : The footprint is negligible
: It works best with older DirectX 9 and 11 titles. Modern games with aggressive anti-cheat or obfuscated memory addresses frequently cause the tool to fail or the game to crash.
: Like many memory-editing tools, it is frequently flagged as a "False Positive" by Windows Defender. Users must manually whitelist the executable, which requires a high level of trust in the source. : In testing, the value changes were near-instantaneous
: Because version 1.0 lacks sophisticated error handling, "over-injecting" (entering values beyond the 32-bit integer limit) can cause immediate game crashes or corrupted save files.
: The footprint is negligible. It consumes less than 50MB of RAM and has no noticeable impact on CPU frames-per-second (FPS) during gameplay. Risks and Limitations
As a version 1.0 release, the tool’s scope is relatively narrow:
The utility operates as a standard memory editor or "trainer." Once launched alongside a compatible game, it identifies the memory addresses associated with currency values (gold, credits, or cash) and allows the user to lock or increment those values.
: In testing, the value changes were near-instantaneous once the memory pointer was successfully hooked. Compatibility and Performance
Prospective users should be aware of the inherent trade-offs:
: It works best with older DirectX 9 and 11 titles. Modern games with aggressive anti-cheat or obfuscated memory addresses frequently cause the tool to fail or the game to crash.
: Like many memory-editing tools, it is frequently flagged as a "False Positive" by Windows Defender. Users must manually whitelist the executable, which requires a high level of trust in the source.
: Because version 1.0 lacks sophisticated error handling, "over-injecting" (entering values beyond the 32-bit integer limit) can cause immediate game crashes or corrupted save files.