Despite the risks, cheat usage persists due to:
Psychologically, cheaters often suffer from competitive anxiety or treat the game as pure reward extraction rather than a test of skill.
Relying on an aimbot makes you a worse player over time. You never learn recoil control, positioning, or game sense. When the hack fails (or is patched), you go from “pro” to “beginner” instantly.
Case example: In 2022, a popular “MK Tool” variant was found to be a keylogger. The developer posted logs of over 5,000 users’ Facebook and Google tokens on a hacker forum. None of those users ever got their PUBG accounts back.
Cheating harms non-cheating players by:
Most gaming communities, including Reddit’s r/PUBGMobile and official Discord, ban any mention of MK tool or similar cheats.
They scan the game’s RAM for variables like ammo count, player coordinates, or health, then modify them. This is the most common method for “unlimited ammo” or “instant heal.”