As the screen faded to gold, a red notification popped up in the corner of his desktop: [System] Unexpected client behavior detected.
, where speed and building are everything, Leo was tired of being out-cranked by sweats. He’d heard the rumors on Discord—Astro wasn't just a script; it was a ghost in the machine. He hit "Execute."
The "Silent Aim" was terrifyingly efficient. It didn't snap his camera or lock his movements; it simply redirected the bullets. To anyone watching, it looked like Leo was just lucky. To Leo, it felt like being a god. He didn't need to aim; he just needed to be in the same zip code as his target. He enabled Auto-Build
Nothing happened at first. Then, a sleek, neon-purple GUI slid onto his screen. He toggled the first option: Silent Aim
The screen went black. The high was over. Leo sat in the dark, realizing that while Astro made him the best player in the lobby, he wasn't really "playing" at all. action-packed details to the battle scenes, or should we explore the consequences of Leo getting banned?
Leo smirked, his heart racing with a mix of adrenaline and guilt. He watched as the last player in the lobby—a legitimate top-tier builder—tried to outmaneuver him. Leo didn't even build back. He just walked forward, firing his AR into the air. The Astro script did the rest, curving the tracers through the sky like heat-seeking missiles. Victory Royale.