Acting Like a Bot for 1 Hour

Have you ever wondered what it would be like to blend in with the AI? To walk among real players while acting like the clunkiest, most predictable non-human character on the server? That’s exactly what I did—played a full hour pretending to be a bot. And let me tell you, it was more fun (and weirdly effective) than I ever expected.


Why Act Like a Bot?

Bots are usually the punching bags of online games. They move stiffly, aim terribly, and seem to exist just to be farmed. So I thought—what if I played like that on purpose? Could I fool real players? Could I mess with their heads? Could I win by being bad?

Turns out, yes.


The Rules Were Simple

No fast movements. No 360s. I walked in https://www.hs-terschelling.nl/ straight lines, got stuck on corners, and “aimed” by slowly dragging my crosshair across the screen like I was using a potato as a controller. I only shot at enemies after a long delay, and I always reloaded at the worst times. Oh, and jumping? Only straight up—no fancy strafing.

Basically, I tried to look like I’d never touched a game before.


Reactions Were Priceless

At first, players just ignored me, assuming I was a useless AI. A few teammates even tried to “protect” me like I was a helpless escort mission character. Enemies hesitated when they saw me—probably wondering if I was bait. I even saw one guy crouch and spin in front of me, trying to communicate… and I just kept walking into a wall.

The confusion was beautiful.


The Unexpected Strategy

Believe it or not, pretending to be bad actually helped. In some matches, enemies didn’t see me as a threat and ignored me completely—letting me sneak behind them and score surprise kills. Other times, I’d lure enemies out of hiding because they thought I was easy prey.

The best part? When they died to me, the rage in voice chat was unreal. “Bro, did I just get killed by a BOT?!”

Yes. Yes, you did.


Botting Around the Map

I made it a mission to act like a total background character—following allies around, crouching randomly, getting stuck in doorways, or staring at walls. One time, I stood on a point doing nothing, and somehow no one noticed me the entire round.

By the end, I had fully embraced the bot life. No fancy plays, no sweaty try-hard moves. Just pure, low-effort trolling.


Final Thoughts

Acting like a bot for an hour was some of the most chaotic fun I’ve had in a game. It’s hilarious, messes with people’s heads, and weirdly makes you appreciate just how good most real players are. Plus, it’s a perfect reminder: you don’t always need to sweat to enjoy the game.

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