def aimbot(): global aimbot_active try: while aimbot_active: # Get player and target positions (for simplicity, assumes the player is at a known base address) player_pos = (read_memory(base_address + player_base + x_offset), read_memory(base_address + player_base + y_offset), read_memory(base_address + player_base + z_offset)) # Calculate direction and modify aim # Simple calculation; real aimbot would require more complex calculations (e.g., vector math) and predict lead pyautogui.moveTo(player_pos[0], player_pos[1]) # This will move your mouse, simple example time.sleep(0.01) # Anti AFK prevention and throttles except Exception as e: print(f"Error in aimbot loop: {e}")
# Aimbots aimbot_active = False # ESP esp_active = False # TP tp_active = False tp_x, tp_y, tp_z = 0, 0, 0 apocalypse rising 2 script aimbot esp tp to p fix
import keyboard keyboard.add_hotkey(aimbot_toggle, on_aimbot_toggle) keyboard.add_hotkey(esp_toggle, on_esp_toggle) keyboard.add_hotkey(tp_toggle, on_tp_toggle) read_memory(base_address + player_base + y_offset)
def read_memory(addr): kernel32 = ctypes.windll.kernel32 pm = ctypes.pointer(ctypes.c_ulong()) kernel32.ReadProcessMemory(kernel32.GetCurrentProcess(), addr, pm, ctypes.sizeof(ctypes.c_ulong), None) return pm.contents.value vector math) and predict lead pyautogui.moveTo(player_pos[0]
pip install pyautogui numpy import pyautogui import numpy as np import ctypes import time
# Example toggle keys aimbot_toggle = 'f1' esp_toggle = 'f2' tp_toggle = 'f3'
This example will be in Python, using the pyautogui and ctypes libraries for simplicity. Note that for any meaningful interaction with the game, you would likely need to use a library that can interact with the game's memory directly (e.g., mssdk or similar), which is highly game-specific and often requires reverse-engineering efforts.