The screen flickered. The lag began to creep in. Elias felt the digital walls closing in. "Come on, Nix," he muttered, his fingers flying across the mechanical keyboard. He rerouted the incoming data into a "black hole" script, a risky maneuver that used Nix’s processing power to simply ignore the junk data.
Nix wasn't like the clunky, official bots that sat in member lists with colorful tags. It was a phantom, an extension of Elias’s own account. When Elias slept, Nix remained vigilant. It sorted through thousands of messages across a dozen servers, filtering for keywords like "zero-day," "exploit," or "leak." It was his silent partner in the high-stakes game of information brokerage. Nix Selfbot
The selfbot went to work instantly. To an outside observer, Elias’s account was moving at impossible speeds. It was identifying the raiders, logging their IDs, and cross-referencing them with a global blacklist—all while simultaneously reporting the accounts to Discord’s trust and safety team. In the chat, Nix began to "shadow-delete" the incoming spam, scrubbing the server clean before the human moderators even realized what was happening. The screen flickered
As the server returned to its usual quiet hum, Elias leaned back in his chair. He checked Nix’s logs. The selfbot had processed over fifty thousand events in under an hour. It had saved the community, and more importantly, it had remained undetected. Elias reached out and typed a final command: /nix sleep. "Come on, Nix," he muttered, his fingers flying
One rainy Tuesday, a notification pinged with a sharpness that cut through Elias’s concentration. A rival group, known as the Red Sentinels, had initiated a massive raid on a community Elias protected. Usually, a raid was a chaotic storm of spam and malicious links, but this was different. The Sentinels were using a coordinated script to bypass standard moderation.