The consensus among the Worms community is overwhelmingly negative regarding these tools. Unlike a fast-paced FPS where a "hacker" might be dealt with in seconds, a Worms match is a slow burn. Watching an opponent systematically dismantle your team with impossible, wind-defying shots over 15 minutes is particularly draining.

: Patch let it fly. The bomb didn't just move; it danced. It clipped the corner of a girder, bounced off a passing crate of health, and dropped exactly down a chimney-sized hole. The Impact

To do this, the cheat must bypass the game’s client-server verification (or peer-to-peer host checks) to read opponent coordinates in real-time. This is the most "aimbot-like" feature—automatically knowing exactly where an enemy worm is, even behind a mountain.

In the absence of a dedicated aimbot, many players rely on exploits/glitches to gain an edge:

If you enjoy theory behind game cheats, analyzing Worms’ projectile physics is interesting. If you just want to win online, practice manual aiming — it’s far more satisfying.

For those unfamiliar with the term, an aimbot is a type of software that assists players in aiming and targeting their opponents in a game. In the context of Worms WMD, the aimbot is specifically designed to work with this game, providing players with a significant advantage over their opponents. The Worms WMD Aimbot uses advanced algorithms and machine learning techniques to analyze the game's environment, predict enemy movements, and adjust aiming parameters in real-time.

: High-end scripts can predict if a shot will clip a piece of land, calculating the exact pixel clearance needed to graze a cliffside and drop a Cluster Bomb onto a hidden team.