ValorantAIaimbot.tipsyaim

Undetected Valorant hardware cheat built as an external AI aimbot.

We build Valorant AI aimbots the hard way. The software runs on a second PC, watches your game through a capture card, and sends mouse input back through a Ferrum or MAKXDaim device. Nothing of ours ever touches Valorant itself. That's why Vanguard hasn't caught it, and why it keeps working after every patch.

What is a Valorant AI aimbot?

A Valorant AI aimbot looks at your screen and moves your crosshair to targets. The difference between ours and a typical Valorant cheat: ours actually looks at the screen. No memory reads, no DLL injection, no kernel hooks.

A capture card sends your game feed to a second PC, our model detects enemy models visually, and the aim adjustments are sent back to your gaming PC through a Ferrum or MAKXD device as real mouse input.

We launched with zero detections and that hasn't changed. Not luck. There's physically nothing on your PC for the anti-cheat to find.

tipsyaim. Valorant AI Aimbot Logo

What you need for a 2PC aimbot setup

Three pieces of hardware. That's it. One PC runs Valorant, the other runs tipsyaim.

1

Capture card

Elgato 4K X or AverMedia GC573. Routes your Valorant feed to the second PC at 1080p240 with no visible latency, so the AI sees what you see, live.

2

Aim device

A Ferrum or MAKXD takes aim commands from the AI PC and emits them as real HID mouse input on your gaming PC. Vanguard sees a mouse. That's all it sees.

3

Second PC

Any modern box with a decent GPU. The model runs here. Your gaming PC stays completely stock.

Ferrum and MAKXD: what they actually do

Ferrum

Ferrumis a hardware aim device for FPS cheats. It sits between your AI PC and your gaming PC, taking coordinate changes from our software and emitting them as genuine HID (Human Interface Device) mouse input. Vanguard sees a standard mouse. There's nothing unusual to flag.

tipsyaim supports Ferrum out of the box. Plug it in, select it in settings, done.

MAKXD coming soon

MAKXDis the upcoming revision of the MAKCU lineage. It's not out yet. When it launches, it'll bring a new command API, native Xbox controller emulation, and an integrated mouse-movement AI that learns your natural input profile so aimbot motion matches your hand.

Expected price point around $20. We'll add native MAKXD support the moment it's available. For today, use Ferrum.

Current hardware reality

Ferrum is the only aim device we support right now. MAKXD isn't released yet, so it can't be supported yet (we'll add it at launch). MAKCU is the older version of MAKXD and is not supported because its firmware and movement patterns are well-known to anti-cheats. KMBox is also not supported.

Why tipsyaim works when others don't

Undetected since launch

Zero Vanguard and Faceit detections. Not a rhetorical boast. The cheat lives on separate hardware, so there's nothing for the anti-cheat to scan.

AI vision, not memory reading

The model reads pixels from your capture card and identifies enemy models the same way a human would. No injection, no memory access, no game files touched.

Patch-proof

Valorant patches don't break us. The AI reads what's on screen, so as long as Valorant still renders players, the aim still works. Zero downtime after updates.

Real hardware aim input

Aim goes through Ferrum as genuine HID mouse input. Anti-cheats can't tell our mouse apart from yours, that's the whole point of HID. MAKXD (coming soon) will be supported at launch. KMBox and MAKCU are not supported.

Built for 2PC

Designed specifically for the 2PC setup. One machine games, one aims. Clean separation, zero cross-contamination, no shared process space.

Priced to keep it simple

Day pass from €12.99. Monthly, 3-month, and yearly plans available. Pay with crypto or card. Instant delivery after payment confirms.

Why this works when internal cheats don't

Vanguard is a kernel-level anti-cheat. That's a specific category of problem: if your cheat runs on the same machine as Valorant, Vanguard is reading its memory, scanning its drivers, and tracking its processes. Detection is eventual. Not "if." When.

The way out of that arms race is to not be there in the first place. Our Valorant AI aimbot never touches your gaming PC. The capture card passes through HDMI. The aim device plugs into USB. Both are commodity hardware with valid uses.

Valorant AI aimbot vs traditional Valorant cheats

Featuretipsyaim (AI Aimbot)Traditional Valorant Cheat
Detection MethodExternal, nothing on game PCInternal, injects into game
Vanguard safe?Yes. No code on the game PC to detectUsually. Detection waves are frequent
Survives Game Patches?Yes. AI vision doesn't breakNo, needs updates
Hardware RequiredCapture card + Ferrum/MAKXDNone (but high ban risk)
Setup Type2PC aimbot or single PCSingle PC only
Ban RiskZero. 0 bans since launchHigh. ban waves common

Frequently asked questions

Is tipsyaim actually undetected?

Yes. The whole setup runs on a second PC. Vanguard scans your gaming PC, and nothing of ours is on it, so there's nothing to detect. Zero detections since launch.

What is a Valorant 2PC aimbot?

A 2PC aimbot is a hardware setup where one PC runs Valorant and a second PC runs the AI. A capture card carries the game feed over, and a Ferrum or MAKXD device sends mouse input back. Because the cheat is on separate hardware, anti-cheat can't see it.

Do I need a Ferrum or MAKXD?

You need an aim device. Today that means Ferrum. MAKXD is launching soon (same family as MAKCU, but with a new API and mouse-movement AI) and we'll add support when it ships. KMBox and MAKCU are not supported.

Why is this better than internal cheats?

Internal cheats get caught eventually. Vanguard is kernel-level, and it has direct access to everything running on your gaming PC. External AI aimbots like tipsyaim run on different hardware, so there's nothing for Vanguard to read. If staying unbanned matters, external is the only real option.

How does the AI detect enemies?

Computer vision. The model watches your screen through the capture card and identifies enemy models by their appearance, same way your eyes do. It then calculates the aim delta and sends it to your Ferrum or MAKXD. No memory reads, no injection, nothing touching the game.

What does it cost?

Day pass from €12.99. Monthly €45.99, 3-month €109.99, yearly €349.99. We accept crypto and card. Instant delivery after payment confirms.

Does it still work after Valorant patches?

Yes. The AI reads pixels on screen, not game files. Valorant can patch whatever it wants, our model still sees the same player silhouettes. No updates from you required.

Can I run this on a single PC?

2PC is the recommended setup because it's the safest. You can technically run everything on one machine with a capture card if the specs are strong enough, but you lose some of the detection safety that separate hardware gives you. The aim device is still required either way.