Using a hack for even a single play creates a false sense of accomplishment. You rob yourself of the dopamine release that comes from finally passing that difficult section after 50 tries. You never develop the actual skill—only the illusion of it. You might think, "What if I just use a gentle autoplay? Add random misses? Variable latency?"
So, it is no surprise that a specific search term has been gaining traction among frustrated beginners and cynical veterans alike:
The dopamine hit of seeing a perfect score generated by a script fades in seconds. The hollow feeling of knowing you didn’t earn it lasts much longer. Meanwhile, the joy of finally—after 500 attempts—hitting that tricky jumpstream perfectly with your own two hands? That feeling is permanent.
You might be stuck at 2-star maps. Your accuracy is stuck at 92%. Your hands hurt after 30 minutes. The gap between you and the top players seems infinite.