If you die to a suspicious player in Free Fire—someone who headshots you through a wall or while facing the opposite direction—do not just rage quit.
Garena’s Dedi system has a "Trust Score." High-trust players who submit accurate reports get their reports prioritized.
Most "free aimbot" logins ask for your Free Fire ID and password to "inject" the cheat. In reality, they are harvesting your account. A level 70 account with 50+ skins is sold on the black market for $30–$100. You lose everything.
| Criteria | Rating (1–10) | |----------|----------------| | Safety | 1/10 (extremely dangerous) | | Effectiveness | 2/10 (rarely works as advertised) | | Ban risk | 10/10 (certain ban) | | Actual value | 0/10 (wastes time, risks account) |
Conclusion: “Aimbot 100 Free Fire” is either malware, a scam, or an outdated mod that will get your account banned. No professional player or content creator recommends it. Avoid at all costs.
If you see a video claiming “100% working,” ask yourself: If it’s so good, why is the creator still playing on a low-rank smurf account?
Garena employs a sophisticated anti-cheat system called Garena Anti-Cheat System (Referred to as "Dedi" in the community). Since the OB (Open Beta) updates, Dedi has become server-sided.
Garena has collaborated with law enforcement in Brazil, India, and Indonesia to arrest mod menu creators. Distributing "Aimbot 100 Free Fire" is a violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act in many jurisdictions.
Professional Free Fire players (like Mafia, Abhishek, or WhiteGFF) have a headshot rate of roughly 30-40% in ranked matches. A 100% headshot rate is physically impossible for a human because:
If you see a YouTuber claiming "100 Free Fire Aimbot Headshot," they are likely using advanced video editing (motion tracking overlays) or playing in a custom room with bot accounts.