An aimbot moves your crosshair. A triggerbot does something subtler — it watches your crosshair and fires the instant it crosses an enemy hitbox. You still aim manually. The triggerbot just ensures that every time your aim passes over a target, the shot goes off at the mathematically perfect moment. No human delay, no missed opportunities, no slow reaction on a flickering target.
This makes triggerbots one of the stealthiest cheat features available in Marvel Rivals. There's no suspicious crosshair movement for killcams to capture. No snapping, no tracking anomalies, no inhuman flicks. The only evidence is that you seem to have exceptionally fast reaction times — which, with the right delay settings, looks identical to a player with good reflexes.
In this guide, we'll cover how triggerbots work in Marvel Rivals, which heroes benefit most from auto-fire, the exact delay settings you need for each hero type, how to pair a triggerbot with an aimbot for maximum effectiveness, and the detection risks you need to manage. If you're looking for a low-profile way to improve your hit rate without the risks of aggressive aimbot settings, triggerbot is your answer.
How a Triggerbot Works
At a technical level, a triggerbot performs a simple loop: every frame, it checks whether your crosshair is currently positioned over an enemy hitbox. If yes, it sends a mouse click input after a configurable delay. If no, it does nothing. The entire process happens in milliseconds.
The Detection Loop
- Read crosshair position: The triggerbot determines exactly where the center of your screen (crosshair) is pointing in 3D game space.
- Check for enemy hitbox intersection: Using player position data from game memory, it calculates whether your crosshair ray intersects any enemy player's hitbox.
- Apply delay: If a hitbox is detected, the triggerbot waits for the configured delay period (randomized within a range) to simulate human reaction time.
- Send fire input: After the delay, the triggerbot sends a mouse click event that the game registers as you clicking the fire button.
- Reset: After firing, the triggerbot returns to the detection loop, ready for the next opportunity.
Why Triggerbots Are Hard to Detect
Aimbot detection relies heavily on analyzing crosshair movement patterns — inhuman tracking speed, pixel-perfect bone locking, impossible reaction flicks. A triggerbot produces none of these signals. Your crosshair moves naturally because you're the one moving it. The triggerbot only affects the timing of the fire input, which is virtually invisible in replays and killcams.
The only statistical anomaly a triggerbot creates is consistently fast reaction times — you fire the instant your crosshair touches a target, every single time. But with proper delay randomization, even this pattern disappears into the noise of normal gameplay variance.
In replays and killcams, a triggerbot user looks identical to a player with fast reflexes. There's no aim movement to analyze because the triggerbot doesn't touch your aim. Spectators see natural-looking crosshair movement with well-timed shots — exactly what a skilled player produces.
Best Heroes for Triggerbot
Not every hero benefits equally from a triggerbot. The value depends on the hero's weapon type, fire rate, and how much timing matters for their damage output.
S-Tier: Maximum Triggerbot Value
- Black Widow: Hitscan rifle with high fire rate. Every bullet that connects at the perfect moment adds up to significantly higher DPS. The triggerbot ensures zero wasted crosshair time — the instant your aim touches an enemy, bullets are flying.
- Hawkeye: Charged shots with precision timing. Hawkeye's damage scales with charge level, and releasing at the exact moment your crosshair crosses a head hitbox maximizes damage per shot. Triggerbot turns Hawkeye into a one-shot machine.
- Hela: Hitscan attacks where consistent fire timing means consistent damage output. The triggerbot keeps her DPS at theoretical maximum by never missing a fire opportunity.
A-Tier: Strong Triggerbot Value
- Star-Lord: Rapid-fire dual blasters. The triggerbot can handle the timing of burst fire, ensuring each burst starts the instant your crosshair connects. Especially useful during strafing duels.
- Iron Man: Repulsor projectiles benefit from triggered timing on initial shot placement. Less effective during sustained fire but excellent for opening bursts.
- Punisher: Heavy damage per shot makes perfect timing critical. Each triggered shot that connects is significant damage that might have been delayed by human reaction time.
B-Tier: Moderate Value
- Spider-Man: Projectile web shots have travel time which reduces triggerbot effectiveness — the target can move between trigger and hit. Still useful for close-range engagements.
- Support heroes: Triggerbots on heal abilities ensure instant healing response. Less flashy but can save teammates who would otherwise die to the fraction-of-a-second delay in your reaction.
C-Tier: Minimal Value
- Melee heroes (Hulk, Venom, Black Panther): Attacks are area-based, not precision-based. Timing matters less when your attack hits everything in front of you.
- Beam heroes: Continuous fire weapons don't benefit from triggered fire timing — you're holding the button down constantly anyway.
| Hero | Weapon Type | Triggerbot Value | Recommended Delay |
|---|---|---|---|
| Black Widow | Hitscan (Auto) | S-Tier | 60-150ms |
| Hawkeye | Hitscan (Charged) | S-Tier | 40-120ms |
| Hela | Hitscan | S-Tier | 55-140ms |
| Star-Lord | Projectile (Rapid) | A-Tier | 45-130ms |
| Iron Man | Projectile | A-Tier | 50-140ms |
| Spider-Man | Projectile (Arc) | B-Tier | 30-100ms |
| Hulk | Melee | C-Tier | N/A |
Delay Settings — The Key to Staying Undetected
Reaction delay is the single most important triggerbot setting. It determines how long the triggerbot waits between detecting a hitbox under your crosshair and firing. Get this wrong and your superhuman reaction times become the red flag that gets you reported.
Understanding Human Reaction Time
The average human visual reaction time is 200-250ms. Top competitive players average 150-180ms. Professional esports athletes can hit 130-160ms consistently. Anything below 100ms is considered physiologically impossible for sustained gameplay.
Your triggerbot delay needs to sit within the range of "impressive but plausible" reaction times. Too fast and it's suspicious. Too slow and it provides no advantage over your natural reaction time.
Optimal Delay Ranges
| Delay Range | Effective Reaction Time | Looks Like | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0-30ms | ~30ms | Impossibly fast. Instant ban on review. | Extreme |
| 30-80ms | ~55ms | Superhuman. Pro players don't hit this consistently. | Very High |
| 80-130ms | ~105ms | Elite. Plausible for a top-tier player on a good day. | Moderate |
| 120-180ms | ~150ms | Very fast. Within pro player range. Natural looking. | Low |
| 150-250ms | ~200ms | Above average. Indistinguishable from a good player. | Very Low |
We recommend a randomized delay between 80-180ms for most situations. This gives you an effective average reaction time of around 130ms — firmly in "very skilled player" territory without crossing into "suspiciously inhuman" territory.
Why Randomization Matters
A fixed delay creates a pattern. If your triggerbot fires exactly 100ms after every crosshair-on-target event, statistical analysis can detect the unnatural consistency. Human reaction times are noisy — sometimes you react in 140ms, sometimes 230ms, sometimes 170ms. The variance is what makes it human.
Configure your triggerbot with a randomization range rather than a fixed value. A range of 80-180ms means each fire event uses a randomly selected delay within that window. The result is a reaction time distribution that perfectly mimics natural human variance.
Never use a fixed delay value. A triggerbot that fires at exactly 120ms every single time creates a statistical fingerprint that EAC's behavioral analysis can identify. Always use a randomized range with at least 60ms of variance between minimum and maximum delay.
Triggerbot + Aimbot: The Power Combo
While triggerbots work standalone, pairing them with a properly configured aimbot creates a synergy that's greater than either feature alone. Here's how they complement each other:
How the Combo Works
- You move your crosshair toward the target — manually, like a normal player
- The aimbot provides subtle corrections — smoothing your crosshair movement toward the target's hitbox with natural-looking adjustments
- The triggerbot detects crosshair-on-target — the instant the aimbot (and your input) places the crosshair on the enemy, it registers the hit opportunity
- The triggerbot fires after randomized delay — the shot goes off at the optimal moment, timed perfectly to when your crosshair intersects the hitbox
The result: your crosshair drifts naturally toward enemies with smooth, human-looking corrections (aimbot), and the instant it touches a hitbox, the trigger fires with well-timed precision (triggerbot). In a killcam, this looks like a player with excellent tracking and fast reflexes — because the crosshair movement is smooth and the fire timing is within human range.
Settings Synergy
| Feature | Combo Setting | Standalone Setting | Why Different |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aimbot FOV | 10-15 (tight) | 15-25 | Triggerbot handles fire timing, so aimbot only needs small corrections |
| Aimbot Smoothing | 50-70 (high) | 35-55 | Higher smoothing since triggerbot ensures shots connect when aim is right |
| Trigger Delay | 100-200ms (slower) | 80-180ms | Aimbot is doing aim work, so trigger can afford slower delay |
| Trigger Hitbox | Any visible bone | Upper body only | Aimbot keeps crosshair near target, so wider trigger zone is safe |
| Visibility Check | ON (both) | ON | Never fire through walls regardless of configuration |
Tight FOV aimbot (12-15) + high smoothing (55-70) + triggerbot with 120-200ms random delay is the stealthiest possible combat configuration. The aimbot makes your crosshair drift toward enemies naturally, and the triggerbot fires within human reaction time. In replays, this is indistinguishable from a skilled player.
Triggerbot for Ranked Play
Triggerbots are particularly valuable in ranked play because they provide a real competitive advantage with minimal detection risk. Here's how to configure for competitive modes:
Ranked-Safe Configuration
- Delay range: 120-220ms — slightly slower than casual settings for extra safety
- Randomization: Full range (never fixed)
- Hitbox target: Upper body only — avoid triggering on feet or hands which creates inconsistent damage
- Fire mode: Single fire per detection — one click per crosshair-on-target event prevents firing bursts that look too clean
- Hold time: If using on automatic weapons, keep fire active for 100-300ms per trigger event to simulate natural trigger pull duration
Heroes to Triggerbot in Ranked
In ranked, pair triggerbot with heroes where timing precision creates the biggest skill advantage:
- Hawkeye — Charged headshots in ranked decide team fights. Triggerbot ensures you release at the exact pixel-perfect moment.
- Black Widow — Consistent DPS from never missing a fire opportunity. Especially powerful in long-range duels where reaction timing matters most.
- Support heroes — Triggered healing response keeps teammates alive through burst damage that would kill them if you reacted 200ms slower.
For complete ranked strategy including ESP configuration and win rate management, see our ranked cheats guide.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Even with a fundamentally stealthy feature, mistakes in configuration can create detectable patterns:
- Zero or near-zero delay: Firing within single-digit milliseconds of crosshair contact is physically impossible for humans. Always use a minimum delay of 60ms+.
- Fixed delay values: As discussed above, fixed delay creates detectable consistency. Always randomize.
- Triggering through walls: If your triggerbot fires on enemies you can't see, it's effectively a wallhack with a gun attached. Always enable visibility checks.
- Using triggerbot on every hero: Disable it for melee and beam heroes where it provides no benefit but adds detection surface area.
- Not adjusting for hero switch: If you switch from Hawkeye to Hulk mid-match, your triggerbot settings need to change or disable. Auto-detection of hero switches is a premium feature that handles this automatically.
- Pairing with ESP peek-firing: If you're using ESP to track enemies through walls and then peek-fire with triggerbot the instant they're visible, the timing looks inhuman. Add extra delay when peeking corners to simulate natural visual processing time.
Our Recommendation
TATEWARE's Marvel Rivals cheat includes a fully featured triggerbot with every setting discussed in this guide:
- Randomized delay with configurable range: Set your minimum and maximum delay with full randomization between them
- Hero-adaptive configuration: Automatically adjusts triggerbot settings when you switch heroes, including auto-disable for melee heroes
- Hitbox zone selection: Choose which body parts trigger the auto-fire — head, upper body, full body, or custom zones
- Aimbot synergy mode: When paired with aimbot, the triggerbot adjusts its timing to complement the aimbot's smoothing curve for maximum stealth
- Visibility checks: Never fires through walls or on enemies you can't see
- Per-hero presets: Optimized delay ranges and hitbox settings for every Marvel Rivals hero
- Kernel-level operation: Fire input is sent at the driver level, bypassing EAC's input monitoring
Paired with the HWID spoofer for hardware protection, you have a complete stealth loadout for Marvel Rivals competitive play.
Try TATEWARE Marvel Rivals
Hero-adaptive triggerbot with randomized delay, visibility checks, and aimbot synergy mode. The stealthiest auto-fire in Marvel Rivals.
View Marvel Rivals CheatBottom Line
A triggerbot is the most underrated cheat feature in Marvel Rivals. It doesn't dominate fights the way a rage aimbot does, but it provides a consistent, undetectable edge that compounds over hundreds of games into significantly better stats. Perfect fire timing on every engagement means more damage per fight, more kills per game, and more wins per session — all without a single frame of suspicious crosshair movement in any killcam.
The formula: randomized delay between 80-180ms, visibility checks always on, hero-appropriate hitbox targeting, and aimbot synergy with high smoothing for the complete package. This configuration is indistinguishable from a naturally skilled player with fast reactions — which is exactly the point.
For configuration help or hero-specific presets, the TATEWARE Discord has a triggerbot optimization channel where users share their delay ranges and results. It's the fastest way to find settings that work for your specific hero pool and play style.