Ff — Aimlock

Garena has one of the most aggressive anti-cheat systems in mobile gaming. If you get caught using an illegal FF Aimlock, do not expect a warning.

Instead of risking your account, invest in these proven methods.

5.1 Ethics

5.2 Legal aspects

5.3 Marketplace and economics

Let’s put the rumor to rest: You cannot legally lock an enemy's head in Free Fire.

Garena has deliberately limited the aim assist to prevent "laser beams." If you watch pro players on YouTube (like SK Sabir, Mafia, or WhiteGamer), they don't use a lock. They use a combination of: ff aimlock

So, why does everyone search for "FF Aimlock"? Because the drag headshot mechanic feels like a lock when executed correctly. When a pro drags from the hip to the head in 0.2 seconds, viewers mistake it for a script.

The search for FF Aimlock is a search for power. But in Free Fire, true power comes from crosshair control, map knowledge, and muscle memory – things no hack can gift you.

Resist the lure of modded APKs. Turn on your aim assist (legit), dial in your gyroscope sensitivity, and spend 20 minutes daily in the training ground. Within one month, you’ll notice your aim "locking on" naturally – without the guilt, without the bans, and without the malware.

And when you finally achieve that perfect drag shot headshot to win a Booyah in Grandmaster rank, you’ll know it was you – not a script.

Play fair. Play sharp. Get the real Booyah.


Have you encountered an FF aimlock user recently? Report them in-game and help keep Free Fire competitive for everyone. For more legit tips, guides, and sensitivity codes, subscribe to our weekly FF newsletter. Garena has one of the most aggressive anti-cheat

Let’s answer the question directly.

If you use hacked FF Aimlock:

If you master legit aiming (Aim Assist + Gyro + Practice):

The real test came during a scrim against a Tier-2 team. Kael was finally slotted into the starting lineup due to their primary AWPer having “latency issues” (a conveniently spilled energy drink). His team, “Phoenix Rising,” was a fragile ecosystem of egos. There was Mira “Specter” Chen, the icy IGL; Dray “Titan” Hughes, the explosive entry fragger; and poor, gentle Leo “Pockets” Zamora, the support player who always bought the utility and never got the kill.

The score was 7-12. They were losing. On Round 20, Kael activated the aimlock. He set the hotkey to Mouse4, a button on the side of his G502. The cheat’s GUI flickered: [Friendly Targeting: ACTIVE]

He didn’t aim at the enemy. He aimed at Titan. the icy IGL

As Titan swung a corner, Kael’s crosshair snapped gently to the back of Titan’s head. He held his fire. The effect wasn’t physical—it was strategic. Because the aimlock tracked Titan’s every micro-movement, Kael knew exactly where Titan was looking. He could see the enemy through Titan’s perspective, refracted through the aimlock’s invisible tether.

“Titan, wide left,” Kael whispered into comms, a second before Titan even moved.

Titan swung. The enemy was there. Titan got the kill.

“Nice call,” Titan said, surprised.

For the next ten rounds, Kael became a prophet. He wasn’t locking onto enemies; he was using his teammates as human radar beacons. The aimlock’s pull was a sixth sense. He knew when Specter was about to peek, when Pockets was flashing, when Titan was nervous. He didn’t need to see the enemy team. He just needed to see where his own team wasn't looking.

They won the scrim 16-14. His teammates celebrated. They called him “The Eye.” They didn’t know that his eye was a parasite feeding on their movement.