LEGO Pirates of the Caribbean – Port Royal 100% Guide
prince of persia forgotten sands trainer pizzadox
Game Guides LEGO Pirates of the Caribbean Guides

Prince Of Persia Forgotten Sands Trainer Pizzadox [Windows]

If you were lucky enough to own a copy of Prince of Persia: The Forgotten Sands back in 2010, you remember the game: the spiritual bridge between the gritty Warrior Within and the cel-shaded charm of the original Sands of Time . But if you were unlucky —or perhaps incredibly savvy—you remember the "Trainer."

With "Infinite Air Jump" activated, the linear corridors of Solomon’s Castle became a playground. You could skip entire combat arenas. You could sequence break. You could float over the "Water Freeze" puzzles and laugh as the developers' intended solution melted away.

So, if you ever dig up an old DVD copy of Forgotten Sands or find it on GOG, do a search. Look for the name. Press Numpad 4. Jump into the sky forever.

Pizzadox understood that. The trainer didn't have a paywall. It didn't have malware (in the reputable versions, anyway). It just had a text file that read: "Greetings. Use this to enjoy the game your way. - Pizzadox" Today, Prince of Persia: The Forgotten Sands is often forgotten (ironic, given the title). It sits in the shadow of The Sands of Time remake that may never come. But for a niche community, the Pizzadox trainer is the secret preservation layer.

The fantasy is being an acrobatic demigod who bends time. The reality is falling into the same pit of spikes seventeen times because your thumb slipped on a wall-run.

Enter the scene: GameCopyWorld , Cheat Happens , or a dusty forum thread from 2011. To the modern gamer, a "trainer" is just a memory scanner like Cheat Engine. But back then, trainers were artisanal. They came with ASCII art, chiptune sound effects (F1 for Activate , F2 for ding ), and a signature.

It was the ultimate "director’s cut" for players who wanted the vibes, the art direction, and the story—without the controller-throwing platforming. Was it cheating? Absolutely. But in 2010, PC gaming was a wild west. We didn't have achievements to validate our egos. We had limited gaming time between homework and bed. If a trainer let me experience the final climb up the Tower of Babel without restarting at the bottom for the 50th time, I paid my dues.

It’s a time capsule of a moment when game developers shipped punishing difficulty curves, and the modding scene responded with a gentle "No, you don't have to suffer."

Let’s talk about the . The Forgotten Sandbox For the uninitiated, The Forgotten Sands is a fascinating anomaly. Released as a movie tie-in to the disastrous Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time film, the game actually slaps. It perfected the "parkour puzzle" with elemental powers (water freezing, air jumping) that felt genuinely innovative.

Did you use the Pizzadox trainer back in the day? Or were you a purist who beat the water statue boss on hard mode? Let me know in the comments below—just don't ask me where to download it now.

wasn't the biggest name like Radar or DEViANCE , but in the niche of Forgotten Sands , they were a demigod.

There is a specific, gilded era of PC gaming that lives rent-free in the heads of anyone who grew up in the late 2000s. It wasn’t about Steam sales or cloud saves. It was about cracked .exe files, glowing green "NFO" files, and a mysterious figure known only as Pizzadox .

Combat was fluid but repetitive. The upgrade system (buying new moves with sand orbs) was stingy. And the platforming, while beautiful, punished a single missed jump with a 30-second respawn timer that made you want to throw your keyboard through the wall.

Pizzadox’s trainer didn't just remove difficulty; it .