Frustrated, Leo looked at a file on his desktop: Marvel_Infinity_Ultimate_Script.lua . It promised the impossible—, AutoPlayer , and an Auto-Grinder that could clear the "60 Prisoners" quest while he slept.

But the world around him began to change. Other players stopped to watch him. Their chat messages were filled with confusion, then anger. "Reported," one wrote. "Cheater," said another. The vibrant, competitive Asgardian tournaments he used to love now felt hollow because the challenge was gone.

He loaded the script. Suddenly, his character, an unranked Iron Man, didn’t just fly; he glided with unnatural precision. An invisible forcefield enveloped him—GodMode was active. Leo watched as the AutoPlayer took over. His character zipped between mission objectives, firing repulsor blasts with a 100% accuracy that no human could match.

While developers often share scripting tutorials for legitimate game mechanics like shields, using external scripts for "GodMode" or "AutoPlayer" functions generally violates Roblox's Terms of Service . Below is a short story exploring the tension between a player's desire for power and the ethics of the game world. The Architect’s Gambit

"This is it," Leo whispered, watching his Shield Credits tick upward by the thousands. He felt like a cosmic entity, more powerful than the Infinity Stones.