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Conan Exiles Cheats & Hacks — ESP, Bow Aimbot, Radar and DMA for Official PvP
Days of star metal farming, one offline raid from gone. Conan Exiles hacks and cheats with bow aimbot, full ESP, radar, speed and a DMA route — running quietly beneath BattlEye on official servers.
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24,000 Exiles, Two Maps, and a Server Full of Offline Raiders
The free Enhanced upgrade dragged the Exiled Lands back into the spotlight, and the Steam peak surged past twenty-four thousand concurrent barbarians fighting over the same desert. Two maps carry that crowd — the Exiled Lands and the storm-lashed Isle of Siptah — nearly a hundred square kilometres of sandstone, snow, and volcano where another clan is always one ridge away.
Here is the part the wiki never mentions. Official servers run BattlEye in the kernel, the grind for star metal and a named thrall like Dalinsia Snowhunter eats real-world days, and none of it is safe while you sleep. Offline raiders watch your render distance, count your turrets, and crack the vault the moment you log off. That is the loop Conan Exiles cheats actually answer — not a single-player god command, but a way to protect time you cannot get back.
The top Funcom forum threads about the resurgence are titled the way you would expect: aimbot is widespread, cheats are rampant, and the alpha clans already run them. This page walks every feature the way it plays on an official server — bow aimbot, full ESP, wallhack, radar, speed, the survival utilities, the DMA hardware route, and the HWID safety net that keeps a flag from ending the account.
Conan Exiles Aimbot — Landing Bow Shots on the Unnamed City Bosses
A Conan Exiles aimbot locks your reticle to a target's hitbox so bow and crossbow shots connect under stamina drain and arrow drop. On official servers it works beneath BattlEye, helping you melt the Unnamed City's seven bosses or win an open-field duel without burning a full quiver of Flinthead arrows on a moving target.
You logged off with a vault of star metal and a leveled Dalinsia Snowhunter. You logged back in to bent foundations and an empty bench. On official PvP the clock never stops, and neither does the clan that watched you ride north every night. The aimbot does not fix the sleep you have to take — it fixes the fight you wake up to.
The community already knows this. The loudest threads about the resurgence read "aimbot widespread," because the alpha clans hold every contested spawn and a missed bow shot at range is a re-craft you cannot afford mid-raid. The point of a tuned aim is to stop bleeding arrows into the sand and start ending the duel on the first volley. Survival shooters share the shape of this problem; the same logic drives a SCUM aimbot for survival PvP, where ammo scarcity makes every connected shot matter more than raw flick speed.
Conan Exiles Aimbot Settings — Bow Draw, Lock-On, and FOV
Bow combat is not hitscan. The arrow leaves the string on a draw timer, arcs with distance, and drops as your stamina bleeds out, so the aim has to account for travel time instead of snapping a flat line. A tight FOV cone with the lock keyed to the upper body keeps the assist quiet during a one-on-one at the Sinkhole, while a wider cone helps when three raiders push your gate at once.
The ignore-downed option matters more here than in most games. A bleeding raider on the floor is not the threat; the second attacker flanking your thrall is. Switching priority to the next standing target keeps the lock from wasting your draw on a body that is already crawling toward a bedroll.
Boss DPS-Lock Versus Open-Field Duels
Inside the Unnamed City the fight is different. Each of the seven bosses soaks an enormous amount of damage, and the run down into The Dregs to face the abysmal remnant punishes every wasted second. A DPS-lock holds the reticle on a single boss bone so every arrow from Reach of the Red Mother lands on the same spot, turning a five-minute attrition fight into a clean clear before the adds overwhelm your thrall.
Out in the open it inverts. A duel on the dunes is about the first exchange — lock, release, reposition — not sustained tracking. Keep smoothing higher for the duel so the correction reads like a skilled shot, and save the hard lock for the boss room where nobody is filing a report.
Conan Exiles ESP — Reading Bases, Thralls, and Star Metal Before They Spot You
It is the third night of a star metal run in the Frozen North. The meteors came down past the Mounds of the Dead, and you know another clan watched the same sky. You are standing on a ridge with a full encumbrance bar and no idea whether the treeline ahead hides a base or a war party.
Conan Exiles ESP overlays players, thralls, animals, resource nodes, and loot chests through terrain, with filters for health, name, distance, and ping. It turns that ridge from a guess into a list — who is home, who is patrolling, and which node is real ore instead of a decoy. Where the single-player admin panel only spawns items, ESP shows you the one thing the game hides on purpose: another player's hidden vault.
Player and Thrall ESP — Health, Name, and Distance
The player layer tags each exile with health, name, and range so you read a fight before it starts. A Dalinsia Snowhunter standing guard at a gate reads differently from a sleeping owner, and knowing which is which decides whether you push the wall or wait for the offline window. On a crowded official server the distance filter is the mercy setting — cap it tight so the screen shows the threats inside spear range, not every wanderer in the biome. The same base-finding instinct carries straight over from a Rust ESP for base-finding or a DayZ ESP loadout, where spotting the camp first is the whole game.
Resource and Loot Filtering — Star Metal and Legendaries
The loot layer earns its keep on a boss run. Filter the overlay to legendary chests and you skip the trash, dropping straight onto the reward a fallen Unnamed City boss left behind instead of sweeping the rubble. The resource layer does the same for the grind — pin it to star metal and obsidian, hide the stone and branches, and a meteor field stops being a scavenger hunt and becomes a route.
Filtering is what separates a usable overlay from a wall of icons. Run everything at once during a quiet farm; trim it to players and legendaries the moment a raid turns contested, because a screen full of node tags is a screen you cannot fight through.
Conan Exiles Wallhack — Seeing Through Sandstone Before You Spend a Jar
Explosive jars are expensive, and a misread wall wastes a stack of them on empty sandstone. The hardest part of a raid is not breaching — it is knowing which side of the foundation holds the bench, the bedroll, and the owner waiting with a two-handed sword.
A Conan Exiles wallhack renders players and structures through walls, foundations, and cliffs, with a visibility check that tells you whether a barrier is thin enough to shoot or spear through. Where ESP labels what exists, the wallhack shows you the body behind the stone — the defender crouched on the battlement, the thrall pot tucked behind the third tier, the sleeper you came for.
Visibility Check — Is That Vault Wall Thin Enough?
The visibility check is the difference between a planned breach and a guess. A single sandstone wall might let an arrow through; a reinforced stone vault will not, and finding that out with your last jar in hand is how raids end early. Read the wall first, then commit the explosives where the check says the shot actually lands.
It plays defense too. When a Purge throws a wave at your gate, seeing the attackers form up behind your own walls lets you place your thralls where the breach will come instead of spreading them thin across every tier.
Conan Exiles Radar — Reading Roam Traffic Around the Obelisks
You are running supplies between Sepermeru and a northern base, and the obelisks are the chokepoints everyone uses to cross the map fast. Half the danger on an official server is not the fight in front of you — it is the war party rotating in from a corner you never checked.
A Conan Exiles radar renders a top-down minimap of nearby players even through terrain, so you read roam traffic around Sepermeru and the obelisks without staring through walls. It carries the players your ESP loses past render range, turning the map into a live picture of who is moving where.
Stream-Proof Radar — Why Players Run It Over ESP
The radar is stream-proof — visible to you, invisible on a recording — which is why it stays on when an overlay would not. You never get caught panning your eyes toward a wall because the intel sits on a clean minimap instead of painted across the world. Pair it with ESP for full coverage during a raid; run it alone when someone might be watching the footage.
Speedhack — Outrunning a Raid Across the Exiled Lands
The map is the enemy as much as any clan. Hauling star metal back from the north under full encumbrance is a slow, exposed crawl, and a sandstorm or a mounted war party can catch you long before the gate. Walking everywhere is how you lose the loot you just earned.
A Conan Exiles speedhack raises movement speed so you cross biomes faster than a horse and break contact during a raid. It compresses the long overland hauls between Sepermeru, the Volcano, and a northern base into a fraction of the usual run, even with a pack heavy enough to pin you in place normally.
Speed Settings — Values That Don't Read as a Script
Restraint is the whole skill here. A modest boost reads like a buff potion and a swift mount; a teleport-tier value reads like a server-state mismatch the moment another player watches you cover a biome in seconds. Keep the multiplier in the believable band for routine hauls and save the hard sprint for the moment you actually need to outrun a posse to your bedroll.
God Mode, Stamina, and Teleport — Surviving a Purge and Scouting From Above
The Purge meter fills while you play, and when it breaks it sends a themed wave straight at your base — harder in the north, relentless if your walls are not ready. That is the moment the survival-utility layer stops being a convenience and becomes the reason your bench is still standing.
God mode, unlimited stamina, teleport, and invisibility are that layer. Soak a Purge wave while your thralls reset, draw a bow forever without gassing out on a cliff climb, blink across the map to scout a vault, or drop off a defender's screen mid-breach. On official servers each runs beneath BattlEye rather than the single-player admin console, which only ever worked offline.
Unlimited Stamina — Endless Bow Draws and Cliff Climbs
Stamina is the hidden tax on every fight in the Exiled Lands. A drawn-out duel ends the second your bar empties and the dodge stops answering, and a climb up a volcano face strands you halfway when the grip gives out. Removing that ceiling keeps you firing, dodging, and scaling long past the point a fair fight would have forced a retreat.
Teleport and Invisibility for Raid Scouting
Teleport turns vault recon into a few seconds of work, lifting you to angles over the Unnamed City aqueduct or a Siptah tower that a grounded raider never sees. Invisibility carries the breach — slip past the defender on the wall, plant the jars, and be gone before the owner's clan reads the alert. These are not the offline Ghost command; they hold up on a live server where the position has to survive a check.
How BattlEye Actually Detects Conan Exiles Cheats
BattlEye is a kernel-level anti-cheat that both the client and the Conan Exiles server must run. It scans memory for injected code and known signatures in real time, and a flag on an official server means a permanent, unappealable ban — while most private and modded servers disable BattlEye entirely.
That split is the first thing the wiki guides miss. The single-player console and the admin panel live in a world BattlEye never watches; official PvP lives in a world where it watches everything that touches the game's memory on your machine. The reason cheats stay rampant despite the kernel driver is that detection has blind spots, and knowing where they sit is the whole game.
BattlEye Detection Layers — What It Catches, What It Misses
Layer What it catches What it misses Kernel signature scan Known cheat modules and injection on the gaming PC Anything living off the main machine, like a DMA rig Client-side integrity checks Tampered game files and obvious memory edits A second PC reading memory it never writes to Report-driven review Players flagged by enemies and reviewed in a queue Quiet builds that never produce an obvious clip The practical lesson is that "undetected" is not one switch. A signature-clean overlay can still draw a report if you play loud, and the ban often lands hours later off a review queue rather than the instant you fire. The same kernel-driver story plays out across the survival genre — it is worth reading how BattlEye handles Tarkov cheats to see how a deeper anti-cheat stack shifts the same blind spots around.
Official Versus Private and Modded Servers
Where you play decides how much of this matters. Private and modded servers frequently switch BattlEye off, which is why testing there carries almost none of the official-server risk. The catch is that the alpha-clan loot, the contested obelisks, and the raids worth running all happen on official, where the driver is always loaded.
Conan Exiles DMA — The Hardware Route Past BattlEye's Kernel Driver
The buyers who commit to wipe-after-wipe survival eventually hit the same wall: an external build, no matter how clean, still runs on the machine BattlEye is scanning. The way past it is not better software hiding — it is moving the cheat off the gaming PC entirely.
A Conan Exiles DMA cheat runs on a second PC that reads the game client's memory over a Direct Memory Access card. BattlEye's kernel driver never sees it, because nothing cheat-related runs on the machine playing the game — aim corrections route through the physical mouse, not software injection. For the serious raider holding a base over months, that is the difference between a build that survives a ban wave and one that does not.
Two-PC Architecture and Firmware Matching
The setup is two machines and a card: the main PC plays Conan Exiles while a second PC reads its memory across the DMA link and feeds corrections back through a real peripheral. The friction is firmware — the card has to match the current client, and the painful part of a DMA build is keeping that firmware current as the game updates. Get it matched and there is simply nothing on the gaming machine for the kernel driver to find. Pairing the right hardware matters here; our notes on DMA firmware for BattlEye titles cover the matching step.
DMA Versus External — When the Hardware Cost Pays Off
The choice is a commitment question, not a power question. An external build is cheaper and faster to start, and it is the right call if you raid a server for a short stretch and move on. DMA costs more up front and asks for the firmware upkeep, but it rides out the detection tightening that eventually catches software on the main PC — the math tips toward hardware the longer you intend to hold ground on official PvP.
Undetected Conan Exiles Hacks — Status, HWID Bans, and Why a Wipe Costs Less
There is a habit the alpha clans share that newer cheaters skip: they check before they raid. A build is only undetected until the moment it is not, and the gap between those two states is exactly where the permanent bans get handed out.
Undetected Conan Exiles hacks stay quiet by matching update cadence to BattlEye changes, and the status page is how you know a build is green before you risk an official-server account. A BattlEye HWID ban blacklists the hardware identifiers your machine reports and carries no appeal — which is why the account, not the base, is the real thing on the line.
Reading the Status Page Before a Raid Window
Treat the status page as part of the raid plan, not an afterthought. Green before you load in means the build is current with the latest patch; anything else means you wait, because an offline window is not worth an account. You can check current Conan Exiles status the same way you would scout a wall — before you commit, not after.
Why a Kernel Ban Costs More Than a Wiped Vault
A wiped base is a weekend. You rebuild the foundations, refarm the stone, and you are back. A kernel ban is everything — every named thrall you broke on the wheel, every legendary off an Unnamed City boss, every hour of progress keyed to a hardware ID you cannot simply swap. That asymmetry is the entire reason a serious account pairs an external build with a HWID spoofer for survival accounts, so a single flag cannot close the door for good.
Conan Exiles Cheats — PvE Grind Versus PvP Raid Configuration
The mistake that gets accounts flagged is running one profile for everything. Settings that are perfectly safe while you farm the Volcano alone are reckless the moment a clan fight starts, because the same overlay that helps you sort ore screams across a contested raid.
Split it in two. A grind profile leans on resource ESP, radar, and speed to move loot fast while nobody is watching; a raid profile dials aimbot FOV down, trims the overlay to players and legendaries, and leans on wallhack so the screen stays quiet during the breach. The table below maps the common situations to a config that fits them.
Scenario Aimbot ESP Wallhack Radar Speed Why this config Solo PvE farming (Sepermeru / Volcano) off / low resource + animal off off medium maximize haul, stay quiet while uncontested Star-metal run (Frozen North) low resource + player off on high beat rivals to meteors; watch the route home Base defense vs Purge medium NPC + player on on off hold the wall; read the wave and any raiders Offline-raid scouting off player + chest on on medium map the vault before spending a jar Contested PvP raid low FOV player-only on on medium low-visibility values for a clan fight Open-field duel medium player + health off off off bow aim under stamina; no overlay clutter Exiled Lands Versus Isle of Siptah
The two maps ask for different setups. The Exiled Lands reward tight resource filtering and a radar tuned to the obelisk routes; Siptah, with its storm and surge spawns, leans harder on player ESP and wallhack because the threats arrive in bursts rather than along known paths. Carry both profiles and swap when you change maps instead of forcing one to cover both.
Running Conan Exiles Hacks on Official BattlEye Servers
Running Conan Exiles hacks on official servers means loading beneath BattlEye and pairing the build with an HWID spoofer so one flag cannot end the account. Private and modded servers that disable BattlEye are far more forgiving — but that is not where the alpha-clan loot lives.
Loader Order and Spoofer Pairing
Load order is the one step that decides whether the rest works. The loader has to start before the BattlEye driver, or the hooks never land and the session is wasted; on an external build the spoofer sits in the same chain so the hardware reads come back clean from the first boot. Decide official versus private before you load, because the safe config for one is the reckless config for the other.
Conan Exiles Cheats FAQ — BattlEye, DMA, Bans, and Servers
Will BattlEye ban my Conan Exiles account on official servers?
Yes. Official servers run BattlEye and issue permanent, unappealable bans, which is why an undetected build paired with an HWID spoofer matters far more here than on a round-based shooter where an account is cheap to replace.
Does the aimbot help against the Unnamed City bosses or only other players?
Both. A bone-locked bow aim with DPS-lock melts the Unnamed City's seven bosses with fewer wasted arrows, and the same lock wins an open-field duel under stamina drain where the first volley decides the fight.
Can ESP and radar show enemy bases and star metal across the Exiled Lands?
Yes. ESP overlays players, thralls, nodes, and loot through terrain while radar reads roam traffic top-down, so you find a hidden vault or a northern star-metal shower before a rival clan reaches it first.
Does a Conan Exiles DMA cheat survive BattlEye better than an external?
In most cases yes. A DMA rig runs on a second PC and routes input through a physical mouse, so BattlEye's kernel driver has nothing on the main machine to scan. The tradeoff is hardware cost and keeping the firmware matched to the current client.
Do cheats work on Isle of Siptah and private or modded servers?
They work on both maps. Private and modded servers often disable BattlEye entirely, while official Siptah and Exiled Lands servers keep it loaded, so the risk profile depends on where you play rather than which map you choose.
Is using Conan Exiles cheats worth the risk?
It depends what you are protecting. On official PvP where one offline raid erases days of star-metal farming, players weigh a quiet ESP, aimbot, or DMA build against the permanent-ban downside and decide based on how much time their account holds.
That star metal run does not have to end at someone else's turret. Every feature above — bone-lock bow aimbot, filtered ESP, wallhack, stream-proof radar, the survival utilities, and a DMA route that keeps the cheat off the gaming machine entirely — runs beneath BattlEye on official servers, so the days you put into a vault stay yours.
