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This has to be aimbot.. right?

545.3K views· 43,661 likes· 8:35· Aug 14, 2025

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Battlefield 6 isn't even out yet and people are already cheating? original post - https://x.com/rileycs_/status/1953932335688114596 viscose - https://www.youtube.com/@UCfvDLSm9fpRJ9olrwLl0I-A irrpa - https://www.youtube.com/@UCRnbWzoPr3N6eL6VKKg5IZg Need a new wallpaper? https://optimum.store Video gear Camera: https://geni.us/5YfMuy Primary Lens: https://geni.us/pWnoPBr https://www.instagram.com/only_optimum/ https://www.twitch.tv/optimum https://twitter.com/OptimumTechYT As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Nothing is sponsored / paid promotion, however some hardware is sent for review and kept.

About This Video

This video is basically me looking at a set of “this has to be aimbot” Battlefield clips that blew up on Twitter (like 70M+ impressions) and asking the annoying question: what if it’s not cheats? The aim looks insanely snappy—instant target switches, flicks to people that aren’t even in frame, and one clip where it looks like they lock onto someone behind a rock. And yeah, at first glance it hits all the same buttons as the aimbot.exe videos we’ve all seen for years. But once you slow things down and actually pay attention, it starts looking a lot more human: overflicks, micro-corrections, and a consistent aiming style across a whole stream—not just a handful of cherry-picked clips. I also talk about how this “aimbot-looking” target switching has become a style people intentionally farm for clicks, and how it’s very achievable with the right setup (lightweight mouse, cloth pad with stopping power, moderate-to-high sens, even mouse acceleration) plus an unhealthy amount of practice. My takeaway is simple: cheating exists, but a lot of gamers massively underestimate what obsessive aim training and low-latency setups can produce—and that’s why these clips trigger people so hard.

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