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Triggerbot vs Aimbot in Valorant: What's the Real Difference?

Triggerbot vs Aimbot in Valorant: What's the Real Difference?

Triggerbot and aimbot in Valorant are two different tools. A triggerbot fires the shot on its own the moment the crosshair crosses an enemy model, without any aim correction, while an aimbot takes the aiming itself and pulls the crosshair toward the target along a set path. In most shooters this difference feels minor, but in a tactical shooter like Valorant it decides the outcome of almost every gunfight.

The reason is the extremely short TTK: the Vandal and Phantom kill with one precise headshot at almost any range on the map, and a player effectively has no room for error. Working options for both tool types, with prices and status, are collected on the Valorant cheats page, and we tested this combo on the current Vanguard build after the Vanguard On-Demand update in late June 2026, using the private ForgeCheats loader to load the software. Vanguard runs at the kernel level and checks processes before you even enter a match, so we monitor the undetected status of both tool types separately and regularly, rather than relying on a one-time test at launch.

Why the difference between a triggerbot and an aimbot is more noticeable in Valorant than in other games

In most titles with a long TTK, whether survival shooters, battle royales, or co-op PvE, a single hit almost never decides a fight. The player has time to react to a miss, walk the crosshair onto the target by hand, or fall back behind cover, and the opponent usually has time to maneuver before a third or fourth hit lands. Valorant works differently: most agents have 130 health points with no armor, and the Vandal deals consistently lethal headshot damage at almost any range, the Phantom loses some damage only at very long distance, but even there a headshot is almost always fatal. The first accurate shot to the head effectively decides the round, and the difference between reacting a little earlier and a little later is measured in milliseconds, not in the number of hits. Round economy only amplifies the effect: a lost player also means a lost weapon, so the cost of one lost duel is higher than in games where respawns happen quickly and without loss.

What a triggerbot does and why it is especially strong here

A triggerbot does not aim, it takes only one task off the player: pressing the left mouse button at the right moment. The player lines the crosshair up on the corner themselves, waits for the enemy to peek, and holds roughly the correct line, the automation handles the rest. The developer describes MEMEZ TRIGGER as a lightweight private triggerbot, and that matches our measurements: the time between an enemy model appearing on screen and the bot firing fits within a fraction of a frame, while the average human visual reaction time is 150 to 250 ms even for trained players. That gap is enough to win duels on pre-fires and pixel peeks, where only reflexes used to decide the outcome. One important detail: a triggerbot does not compensate for poor positioning, it only speeds up the execution of an angle that is already held correctly, so a player with raw aiming mechanics gets less benefit from it than a player who holds a line confidently but loses on reaction speed.

What an aimbot does and how it differs in risk and effect

An aimbot goes further: it turns the crosshair itself toward a point on the opponent's model, compensating for the player's mouse movement. In the MEMEZ FULL package this is an aimbot with Visible Check and Flash Check, which does not fire at targets it cannot see and does not lock on through smoke or a flash. In our view, this is exactly what separates a working configuration from a flagged one: suspicion is not raised by accuracy itself, but by shooting through walls and flashes or an instant crosshair teleport to the head. An aimbot covers not just the moment of firing but the aiming itself, so it is useful where accuracy at long range or against a moving target matters just as much as reaction speed, for example when shooting a running opponent across half the map on Bind or Split. That said, it is important to understand the difference in risk: the more decisions the automation makes for the player, the harder the mechanic is to hide from an attentive spectator, so we always set FOV, Smooth, and the smoothing settings in MEMEZ FULL for the specific engagement distance rather than leaving the factory values.

How we configure the triggerbot so it doesn't look like a bot

MEMEZ TRIGGER offers three trigger modes. Hold keeps the button held down the entire time the crosshair is on the target, Push fires one shot for every crossing of the model, Pixel Change reacts to a change in pixel color inside the crosshair zone. For ranked games we usually recommend Push or Pixel Change with a delay before the shot of around 40 to 90 ms and a small random spread afterward: this brings the reaction time closer to human, rather than zero and physically impossible. Color Tolerance, the allowed color tolerance for the enemy model, is configured separately, as is Fire Rate, which limits the automation's rate of fire to match a specific weapon so the trigger doesn't produce full auto fire on a semi automatic weapon. Auto Strafe and Auto Crouch in the same cheat are enabled separately from the trigger if you only need Anti-AFK protection without automating the shooting, and Stop Mouse briefly blocks accidental hand movement at the moment of the shot.

ParameterTriggerbot (MEMEZ TRIGGER)Aimbot (MEMEZ FULL)
What it automatesThe moment of pressing the left mouse button once the crosshair is already on the targetThe aiming itself, including correction as the target moves
Demands on the player's handHold the angle and aiming line yourselfEnough to look roughly in the opponent's direction
Risk of visual detectionLow with a properly configured delay and color toleranceHigher without Visible Check and Flash Check, sharp snaps are visible on recordings
Entry price in the Valorant catalogFrom 79 rublesFrom 149 rubles combined with the trigger, from 479 rubles for the full package
Who it suitsPlayers with good positioning who lack reaction speedPlayers who need help with both positioning and accuracy

Where exactly the short TTK amplifies the effect

On Valorant maps with long corridors, for example the mids on Haven, Ascent, and Bind, duels are often decided by a single peek with no chance to adjust the crosshair after the first shot. In games with a longer TTK, a body-shot miss can be made up for with a second or third hit, in Valorant there is usually no second chance: if the shot misses the head, the opponent keeps enough health to swing the crosshair back and answer. That's why even a plain triggerbot with no aim assist feels like a serious advantage, it removes exactly the variable that costs a round here: the speed of the first accurate press, not overall accuracy across the whole match.

What to choose for Valorant for this task

We put together options for different scenarios based on real prices and status from the ForgeCheats catalog on the current patch, not on an abstract "best cheat" rating. The starting point is simple: the more confidently a player holds angles and timings on their own, the fewer automation features they actually need, and vice versa.

  • Only correcting the moment of the shot, without the risk of extra actions: MEMEZ TRIGGER from 79 rubles, a pure triggerbot with three modes (Hold, Push, Pixel Change), Auto Strafe, and Anti-AFK protection, without a single aiming feature. Suits players who trust their own positioning and want to minimize the cheat's visible actions.
  • A middle ground between the trigger and the full package: MEMEZ AIMBOT + TRIGGER from 149 rubles combines a silent aim with flick correction and auto-fire, for when positioning alone from the trigger isn't enough anymore but the full ESP set from the top package isn't needed.
  • The full set for ranked games: MEMEZ FULL from 479 rubles, an aimbot with Visible Check and Flash Check, player and object ESP, Spike ESP, and weapon texture removal. We covered how the aim and triggerbot work together in this combo in detail in the MEMEZ FULL review.
  • Budget visual control without shooting automation: MEMEZ LITE from 270 rubles suits players who want only ESP and map information, leaving shooting and the decision to fire entirely up to themselves.

The full list of working Valorant cheats with prices, undetected status, and a feature comparison is collected on the cheats for Valorant → page, and we update it after every Riot patch and Vanguard update.

If you're not sure what fits your skill and risk profile, ask in our community: Telegram (200+ members) and Discord (637+ members). Our specialists there can also tell you the current status after fresh updates and help you tune the delays for a specific rank.

Frequently asked questions about triggerbots and aimbots in Valorant

Can you use only a triggerbot without an aimbot?

Yes, it's a separate, self-sufficient tool. MEMEZ TRIGGER works without a single aiming feature and suits players who hold their own angles and timings but want to win fractions of a second on the button press the moment an opponent appears in the crosshair. You don't need to buy an aimbot on top of it: the setup doesn't require MEMEZ FULL or any other product from the catalog.

Is a triggerbot more noticeable than an aimbot on demo recordings?

Not with a properly configured delay and color tolerance. MEMEZ TRIGGER lets you set a pause before and after the shot, so the reaction looks fast rather than instant. An aimbot without Visible Check is riskier in this sense, because a sharp snap through a wall or smoke is noticeable right away even in an ordinary recording.

Which tool is safer for ranked games in Valorant?

From the standpoint of being spotted by a human in the match, a triggerbot is less noticeable, since it doesn't change the crosshair's path, all the automation comes down to pressing the left mouse button. For ranked play we usually recommend starting with the trigger and moving to a combo with aiming from the catalog of Valorant cheats only if needed, if the reaction-time gap stops closing the skill gap.

Is MEMEZ TRIGGER still working after the latest Vanguard updates?

Yes, as of the last test the cheat remains undetected after the Vanguard On-Demand update in late June. The developer ships patches for the software within 24 to 48 hours after Riot updates, and we track this on the product page rather than just taking the seller's word for it.

Why don't other games separate triggerbots and aimbots by price as much?

Because there the difference in effect isn't as critical: with a longer TTK, an aimbot's crosshair correction gives a bigger boost than saving milliseconds on the shot, so sellers don't split the triggerbot out as a separate, standalone product. With Valorant's short TTK, that separation makes economic and practical sense, and that's exactly why MEMEZ TRIGGER remains its own SKU in the catalog.