My Cheat Tables Folder ⚡ No Login
It’s a toolbox for breaking the rules—just to remember that rules are optional.
To me? It’s a museum of broken realities. my cheat tables folder
No scripts inside. Just a note I wrote to myself: “You don’t need this anymore. The factory must grow. But not because resources are infinite—because you are.” I have no memory of writing that. But every time I see it, I smile. It’s a toolbox for breaking the rules—just to
In that last one lives a table for Dark Souls: Prepare to Die Edition . The script is a mess—half the addresses don't work anymore. But I keep it because it was the first table where I didn’t just check “Infinite HP.” I found the pointer chain myself. Four levels deep. Manually. Felt like I’d hacked the Pentagon. There’s a table for Stardew Valley with only one active script: “Instant Catch (Fish).” I swore I’d only use it to finish that one fishing bundle. I ended up catching every legendary fish in ten minutes. I still feel guilty. No scripts inside
Every cheat table inside tells a story. Not just about the game, but about me . I tell myself I’m organized. The folder has subfolders: Action , RPG , Simulation , Indie . But then there’s “To_Sort_2020” (still unsorted), “Weird_Stuff” , and “DO_NOT_DELETE_Broken_But_Sentimental” .
That’s my cheat tables folder. It’s not just memory hacks and value scans.
Here’s a short, engaging piece of content titled , written in a reflective, slightly nostalgic style. My Cheat Tables Folder It sits there on my second drive, nestled between “Old_University_Projects” and “Rom_ISOs.” The folder is simply named CTs , no icon, no fancy colors. To anyone else, it’s a digital junk drawer full of cryptic .CT files and random screenshots.