![]() ![]() Hopefully, now you know that Synapse Xen is a product that makes code harder to read. To start obfuscating a script, you’d need to message their Discord bot saying, “!obfuscate.” You get access to Synapse Xen if you own a copy of Synapse X. You’ll want to be a well skilled reverse engineer to get through Synapse Xen. Reverse engineering code isn’t a skill that every developer has, let alone well skilled. Another benefit is it would stop many inexperienced developers from being able to try. They probably wouldn’t bother since it would take a while. This could take the thief really long, possibly hours. ![]() A thief would need to reverse engineer every little bit until it’s been translated back to the original code. Turning the code into some nonsense like the image above makes it really difficult to edit. One wall for defense is obfuscating the code. There are tons of other developers out there struggling with their code being stolen and edited. ![]() I’ve had nothing to stop people from stealing my scripts. ![]() A few edits here and there… Change the name… Suddenly someone has made an exploit very similar to mine. I would say that it does its job well with making code hard to read, aka obfuscated. The image isn’t even a tenth of the full code. That image was originally the “print(‘Hello world!’)” script. For example, it would convert something as simple “print(‘Hello world!’)” to the code in the following image. In simple terms, it converts Lua scripts to spammy and unreadable nonsense. Synapse Xen isn’t an upgraded version of Synapse, it’s actually a different product. So, what is Synapse Xen and why would you want it? Well done to the creator, 3dsboy08, for making two successful projects. Exploits are boasting that they support it and it is used heavily as YouTube clickbait. Now another name is going viral, Synapse Xen. Synapse is well known in the Roblox exploiting community. This article was written prior to the discontinuation. NOTE: The Synapse Xen service is discontinued as of June 25, 2020, but scripts still exist which use it's obfuscation. ![]()
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