He tried to close it. The window stayed open.
Kai watched from the spectate screen as his own skin, now hollow-eyed and relentless, chased his former friends across the server. His autoclicker hadn't been a tool. It had been a trap.
That night, deep in a Reddit thread from 2015, he found a name whispered like a forbidden spell: . Exelon Minecraft Autoclicker 1.8.9
And in the tiny, brutalist window still running on his desktop, the faint red text had changed. It now read: “Welcome to the machine. Your shift never ends.”
Kai wasn’t a bad player. He just wasn’t a fast one. While others danced around Ender Dragons with butterfly clicks, his index finger moved like a tired sloth. He watched, frustrated, as a player named “ClickGod” farmed a spawner for three hours straight, the ding of XP orbs a relentless, mocking chorus. He tried to close it
He became a legend on Exelon’s 1.8.9 survival server. “Kai the Breaker,” they called him. He harvested entire forests before the leaves hit the ground. He built a netherite beacon in a single afternoon. He dueled ClickGod and won in four seconds flat.
“Tick-perfect. Heartbeat? Not so much. Exelon doesn’t ban cheaters, Kai. It repurposes them.” His autoclicker hadn't been a tool
“He’s using something,” Kai muttered, knuckles white around his mouse.
But then he remembered losing a duel because his finger cramped at 6 CPS. He double-clicked the file.