Fecurity — enemy-only ESP with legit-to-rage aim
UndetectedFecurity runs from a quiet legit setup to full rage, in an external or internal build. The pull is a clean enemy-only ESP, aim you can tune to feel human, and round automation that handles the busywork between rounds.
- External and internal builds
- Enemy-only clean ESP
- Separate H and V aim speed
- Auto-accept never misses a pop
- No spread and recoil compensation
See Fecurity in action
What Fecurity does
Aimbot built for a human feel
- Enemy-only lock with a visible check, so it ignores teammates and anyone behind cover
- Separate horizontal and vertical aim speed to soften the snap on a peek
- Hitbox priority and a hitscan coefficient to decide where rounds land
- An aim key, plus aim-at-shoot and a target switch delay
- Draw and adjust the FOV to keep corrections closet-tight
Enemy-only ESP that stays readable
- Player box with a toggleable outline
- Health bar and a separate shield/armor bar
- Full skeleton for pose and which way a player is facing
- Player info: nickname and distance
- Maximum distance to cut far-side clutter
- Enemy-only visuals so friendlies stay off your screen
Round automation and utility
- Auto-accept so you never miss a match pop
- Auto-pistol and auto-jump for the reflex plays
- No spread and recoil compensation for spray control
- Untrusted mode
- Developer mode
Builds and compatibility
- External and internal builds, sharing the same ESP and aim
- Runs on Intel and AMD, Windows 10 and 11
- Not supported: AMD Ryzen 1000, 2000 and 3000 series
Setting up your Counter-Strike 2 ESP and aim to feel legit
The Counter-Strike 2 ESP here is deliberately enemy-only, so your screen stays clean during a 5v5 and you’re not reading boxes on four teammates while you clear Mirage palace. You get a player box with an optional outline, a health bar and a separate shield/armor bar, and a full skeleton that tells you which way someone is facing before you swing.
Player info keeps nickname and distance on the target, and a maximum-distance setting lets you cut the far-side noise on a big map like Nuke or Ancient so only the fights that matter light up.
On the aim side, Fecurity is built to look like a player rather than a snap-bot. Separate horizontal and vertical aim speed let you slow the correction so a kill on an AWP peek doesn’t read as an instant 180, while hitbox priority and the hitscan coefficient decide where rounds land.
If you want it to pass a spectator’s eye, use the aim key on a button you hold, turn the visible check on so it ignores anyone behind a wall, and draw the FOV down small so corrections stay on the enemy you’re already aiming at instead of yanking across the screen. A short target switch delay stops it strobing between two players during a retake.
Utility fills in the rest. No spread and recoil compensation flatten the AK and M4 spray so you can hold an angle through most of a mag; auto-pistol and auto-jump cover the reflex plays; and auto-accept means a match pop is never missed while you’re tabbed out.
Untrusted mode keeps the menu and overlay out of recordings and screenshots. Treat it as a capture aid for streaming, not as protection against a ban. No cheat is unbannable: we list Fecurity only while it’s confirmed undetected against VAC and pull it the moment a risky patch lands, and because Faceit and ESEA run kernel-level anti-cheat the risk there is higher than on Valve matchmaking.
It runs on Intel and AMD under Windows 10 and 11, with one honest exception: the AMD Ryzen 1000, 2000 and 3000 series are not supported.