I discovered pixelbits made some huge changes to the game and you cant just change things like you used to. Life the pile up and it should be 500 now. Change the search to 10, and this time you should only get one number set. If you have more than one set of numbers, take 5 more out of the pile and make it 10. If you have 20 items, do a scan for 20, then reduce the pile by 5 to make it 15. Anyway, install CoSMOS or CE, and once you select the JunkJack game, (Back your save up first!!!!!!!!!) select the search for exact and 2 bit. I did some checking as I havent played this game in a long time, and editing it on the phone was so much easier. Hey Xanthor how do u find the code in the first place and also dont u have to pay for the trainer If you dont have membership, they have what is called CoSMOS which is free. I always edit my games, unless online corporate server run. Yeah, some it can ruin the fun, but not for me. No inventory editor, no trainer, just manual code editing, and I got everything I need without creative mode. Originally posted by Lord-Xanthor:Lol, I know this is two years old, but feel I must reply. Only there, if enough players get together and start their own server, they can ban the things they don't like, and everyone will be happy provided they actually maintain traffic. Then again, almost everyone feels like they should be able to tell others how to play a game, right down to complaining about what types of weapons people use in Battlefield. For a dev or fanbase to deny users having access to do whatever they want in their *single player experience where absolutely nobody but themselves are affected* is just backwards thinking. Microsoft will eventually enforce their wishes of people never making any money off Minecraft servers, that is, until they introduce their own rental system ala Electronic Arts. Other games like this can't afford to rely on creating an economy simply because its unnecessary. Even then, unless you have the backing of a huge corporation it requires ongoing, persistant maintenance that bleeds money that is only made up for by continued sales of the game and transactions inside of it. It should be up to actual servers (who most likely profit from having large amounts of people using them) to introduce anti-cheat systems if they want to enforce an in-game economy. I know Terraria on Android just opened up the possibility for mods, ending a few years of ridiculous nonsense that required people root their devices if they wanted to mess with stuff. Break the code? I mean, you have all kinds of games that have some a form of segmented communities that use their own servers to police these things- I'm having a hard time thinking of any sandbox game I've heard of that doesn't allow for direct access to a player's locally saved files- on PC at least.
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