Auto trade bots in (and its successor, Pet Simulator 99 ) are automated scripts used to perform transactions without human intervention, often to gain a competitive advantage in the game's economy . These bots primarily focus on "booth sniping"—instantly purchasing high-value items, like Huge pets or Exclusive eggs , the moment they are listed below their market value. Core Functionality of Trading Bots
Using these bots is generally considered a violation of the regarding exploits and unfair advantages, putting any account that uses them at high risk of permanent termination.
Bots scan Trading Plaza servers for items listed at "mistake" prices (e.g., listing a 31.8m gem egg for 3.18m). They execute these purchases instantaneously, often before a real player can even react. Pet Simulator X [Auto Trade Bot]
Advanced scripts use internal value lists or the game's RAP system to determine if an item is underpriced.
Bot accounts often have basic avatars (e.g., "bacon hairs"), random names followed by numbers (e.g., "user7492"), and very low player ranks despite having hundreds of millions of gems. Auto trade bots in (and its successor, Pet
Players sometimes counter bots by listing items that have manipulated RAP . A bot might see an item "on sale" for 10% of its (fake) high value and buy it, effectively emptying the bot owner's gem inventory for a worthless item.
While some users claim trade bots aren't strictly traceable, Roblox and BIG Games (the developer) frequently implement ban waves for botting and third-party script usage. Bots scan Trading Plaza servers for items listed
Bots inflate the prices of rare pets and make it difficult for casual players to find fair deals, often leading to a "dead" trading environment populated only by automated accounts. How Players Identify and Counter Bots