The sweat stopped, confused. He pulled out his shotgun and began to "crouch-spam" while weaving left and right. Vex’s avatar followed like a haunted reflection, staying exactly three studs away, mirroring every jittery movement. It was as if the sweat was fighting a mirror that refused to break. The Ghost in the Machine

"How are you doing that?" a player typed in chat.Vex didn't answer. He simply targeted the fastest player in the server—a speed-glitcher zooming across the map. Instantly, Vex was pulled along in a ghostly wake, sliding across the pavement at impossible speeds, his limbs locked in the same "superhero" flight pose as his target.

Discussing the regarding scripting and bans.

As the sun set over the low-poly city, a crowd gathered. The Mimic V3 wasn't just a simple copy-paste tool; it was an advanced script that utilized to make the movements look fluid, almost natural. To the onlookers, it looked like Vex was a psychic.

A high-ranking "sweat" wearing a headless head and carrying a Double Barrel SG approached him. The sweat began to emote—a toxic "L" dance intended to provoke a reaction. Suddenly, without Vex touching a single key, his character snapped into the exact same animation. Every tilt of the head, every mocking step, was perfectly synchronized.

The "Dahood Mimic V3 Script" is a piece of software designed for the Roblox game that allows a player's avatar to automatically copy—or "mimic"—the movements, animations, and actions of another player in real-time.

Vex didn't need to initiate a fight. He didn't even need to move his mouse. He stood at the center of the Plaza, a silent observer in a default "bacon hair" skin.

With a final click, Vex toggled the "Combat Mimic" feature. As Static pulled his trigger, Vex’s script forced his own character to pull his trigger at the exact same millisecond. The sound of two shotguns firing as one echoed through the alleyways.