He installed it, logged into his main account — the one with his favorite pet, Ottero, and the M1014 skin he’d paid real money for.
The APK hadn't just cheated Free Fire . It had stolen his saved passwords.
First match: Bermuda. Hot drop at Clock Tower. He aimed roughly at an enemy — the crosshair snapped instantly to the head. Crack. Knock. Crack. Another. Auto Apuntado En La Cabeza Free Fire Apk Sin Baneo -2021-
He won that match with 12 kills. Then another. And another.
On the fifth match, halfway through looting, his screen froze. A red message appeared: "Cuenta suspendida permanentemente. Violación de políticas de juego justo." He tried to log in again. Nothing. His friend checked the account profile — it was gone. He installed it, logged into his main account
That night, his phone started acting strange. Pop-ups. Overheating. Then a message from his bank: "Transaction declined. Suspicious activity detected."
Three headshots. Zero skill.
Ramon never got his account back. And the YouTube channel that posted the "no ban" APK? Deleted a week later — replaced by a new one with the same promises, waiting for the next desperate player. If you're looking for an actual fiction piece (not a cautionary one) based strictly on the title as a game-like fantasy, let me know and I can write a short action scene where a character uses such an auto-aim cheat in a fictional tournament.
Ramon clicked the link. The APK downloaded in seconds — FF_AutoAim_v3.4_no_ban.apk First match: Bermuda
Frustrated, he typed into YouTube: "Auto Apuntado En La Cabeza Free Fire Apk Sin Baneo -2021-"
But one comment stood out: "Yo lo usé en 2021 y sigo sin baneo. Sigue el link de mi canal."