ROCKSTAR’S “MISSING” RIFLE IN BULLY: HOW ONE PACIFIST GAMER UNLOCKED A GUN‑FORGED GHOST FROM 2006
Picture this: a 2006 open‑world teen drama where the biggest danger is a cafeteria sandwich, not a battlefield. Now imagine a modern‑day YouTuber who's on a self‑imposed "don't‑kill‑any‑NPC" marathon—until a hidden rifle pops up like a glitchy Easter egg from the hard‑drive crypt. Sounds like a Netflix true‑crime episode meets a glitch‑hunting hackathon, right? Buckle up, because JustGarrison just dropped the mother‑of‑all "Bully" exploits, and it's hotter than a Friday night LAN party.
THE QUIET HERO OF ST. HELEN’S – A PACIFIST ON A KILL‑FREE QUEST
For the past six months, one man has been doing the digital equivalent of a monk's vow: playing Bully (Rockstar Games' 2006 open‑world classic) without hurting a single NPC. He's been strolling the halls of Bullworth Academy, pulling pranks, winning the "best dodgeball team" award, and—surprisingly—stumbling onto a cache of never‑before‑seen exploits. We're talking about the sledgehammer, an explosive football, and now—the rifle that was supposed to stay locked inside the shooting range minigame.
And guess what? The rifle is not just a prop. It actually deals damage to NPCs, meaning Rockstar probably programmed it to work—then pulled the plug before launch. Think of it as a pizza where someone stole the cheese and left the crust. Deliciously tantalizing, but you're left with a doughy mystery.
Why the “no‑kill” challenge matters
- It forces players to explore every nook of the game, revealing hidden code and forgotten assets.
- It mirrors the scrutiny Rockstar faced after the infamous Hot Coffee scandal in GTA: San Andreas. Back then, a hidden sex minigame turned the company's PR into a courtroom drama.
- It shows that even a "peaceful" play‑through can unearth weaponized secrets. 🎮💥
THE YOUTUBE DROP THAT SHOOK THE BULLY COMMUNITY
Late last night, content creator JustGarrison uploaded a video titled "Rockstar 'Removed' A Rifle From BULLY, I Just Found It!" on YouTube. No mods, no cheat engines—just pure, unadulterated in‑game wizardry. The video walks through the exact steps to bring the rifle into free roam, and the best part? It works on any version of Bully. That means the glitch is baked into the game's core, not a one‑off console patch.
THE EXPLOIT BREAKDOWN (GRANDMA‑FRIENDLY)
Here's a step‑by‑step cheat sheet that even your grandma could follow (assuming she still remembers how to use a controller):
- Start a new game and head straight to the school's shooting range.
- Enter the minigame and pick up the rifle. Normally you'd finish the challenge and the gun disappears.
- Before the minigame ends, pause the game (or trigger a quick‑save, depending on your platform).
- Leave the shooting range area without exiting the minigame. The game's state machine gets confused, thinking you're still in the range while you're actually roaming the campus.
- Now the rifle is in your inventory for free roam. Aim, fire, and watch NPCs flinch—yes, the BB pellets actually cause damage.
If you're itching to test it, remember: the rifle's animation is buggy (think "dead crane" meets "broken mannequin"), and you can even fire it during cutscenes. That's like discovering a secret backstage pass to a concert that's been locked since the opening night.
WHAT ROCKSTAR REALLY THOUGHT WHEN THEY TORE THE RIFLE OUT
In the original shooting‑range minigame, the rifle only fires BB pellets—harmless enough to avoid any controversy. But the existence of a functional, damage‑dealing weapon outside that minigame raises eyebrows. Why would Rockstar hide it?
Consider the timeline: Bully dropped in 2006, roughly a year after the Hot Coffee scandal erupted when a hidden sex minigame in GTA: San Andreas was uncovered. The media frenzy was a PR nightmare—think endless news cycles, congressional hearings, and a lawsuit that made a lot of CEOs wish they'd stayed in the arcade.
Given that context, Rockstar likely scrapped the rifle's third‑person assets before launch to avoid any "school‑shooting" backlash. Even if the gun was just firing BBs, the optics of a teenager walking around a virtual school with a rifle were too risky in a post‑Hot Coffee world.
Comic‑relief: the “explosive football” and other wacky weapons
While the rifle stole the headlines, remember that the same pacifist gamer also uncovered a sledgehammer and an explosive football. The latter is basically a grenade disguised as a sports ball—perfect for a teenage bully who wants to "just mess around." Those glitches are the digital versions of finding a fully‑loaded Nerf gun in your dad's closet.
THE REACTIONS—FROM FANS TO THE KINGPINS AT ROCKSTAR
The Bully community erupted like a soda can in a freezer. Forums lit up with threads titled "Did Rockstar really hide a rifle?" and "Should we send this to the FBI?" (Spoiler: No, don't, you'll just get a cease‑and‑desist.) Meanwhile, the YouTube comments section turned into a meme‑factory: "When you realize the real boss level is finding the weapon, not beating the game."
Rockstar has yet to comment publicly. That silence is louder than a gunshot in a quiet hallway—especially when you consider how quick the company was to patch or pull content after Hot Coffee. If they ever issue an official statement, it'll likely be something like: "We're looking into it," followed by a patch that either removes the rifle entirely or, heaven forbid, makes it a legit weapon in free roam. Either way, the internet will be ready with a "🔥" reaction.
TECHNICAL DEEP DIVE: WHY THE RIFLE STILL COUNTS AS DAMAGE
Let's peel back the code onion—layer by layer—so even the most hardware‑phobic can understand why the rifle works. In simple terms, Rockstar's weapon system is modular:
- Weapon Object: Defines the model, sound, and animation.
- Ammo Type: For the rifle, it's "BB pellets". The game treats these as low‑damage projectiles.
- Damage Table: Assigns how much health an NPC loses per hit. In the shooting range, the value is set low (enough for a minigame).
- Context Flag: Normally, the flag "RANGE_ONLY" prevents the weapon from spawning outside the range.
The exploit tricks the game into clearing the "RANGE_ONLY" flag while preserving the weapon object and its damage table. The result? The rifle becomes a regular item you can equip anywhere. The fact that it still applies damage indicates the damage table was left untouched—meaning the developers never intended for the flag to be the only barrier.
In short, they disabled the "you can't have this outside the range" switch, but forgot to delete the "hey, this does damage" line. Classic Hollywood ending: the villain leaves a tiny clue, and the hero (you) discovers it.
WHAT THIS MEANS FOR MODDERS, SPEEDRUNNERS, AND THE LEGAL DEPARTMENT
For modders, this is liquid gold. They can now create a "Bully Unlimited Arsenal" mod that re‑enables every hidden weapon. Speedrunners will have a new category: "Finish Bullworth without killing anyone—but with a rifle." The legal department? They'll probably draft a memo about "unintended weapon functionality" and pray the public doesn't notice.
But remember: JustGarrison didn't use any third‑party tools. This is pure in‑game manipulation—so it's technically not a hack, just a glitch. That distinction matters if you ever get a DMCA takedown notice (unlikely, but you never know).
THE BIGGER PICTURE: IS THIS THE BEGINNING OF A “BULLY 2.0” WITH MORE GUNS?
The internet loves a good "what if" scenario. A future patch could re‑introduce the rifle for a limited‑time event, or Rockstar could spin a "Bully: Schoolhouse Shock" DLC featuring a full‑blown armory (think "Fortnite" meets "Mean Girls"). While that sounds like a nightmare for the dev team's PR, it would also be a massive cash grab.
Until then, the only people wielding the rifle are the dedicated few who study every line of code like a detective interrogating a suspect. And honestly? That's the most entertaining thing we've seen in the world of retro game exploitation since the Kingdom Hearts "iTunes Store" glitch.
WHAT TO DO NEXT? (ACTIONABLE & FUNNY‑BUT‑USEFUL LIST)
- Try the exploit yourself – Follow the step‑by‑step guide and see if you can turn Bullworth into a black‑ops training ground.
- Record your chaos – Upload a "Bully Rifle Montage" to TikTok. Hashtag #BullyGunShow.
- Spread the word – Share this post on Reddit's r/gaming and r/rockstargames. The more eyes, the merrier the discussion.
- Enable 2FA – On any accounts you use for game mods or YouTube, because you never know when a "security breach" might be a troll with a fake DMCA.
- Support the creator – Subscribe to JustGarrison's channel. He's the modern‑day Indiana Jones of glitch hunting.
FINAL VERDICT
Rockstar's Bully may have been a teenage drama set in 2006, but the discovery of a hidden rifle proves that even a decade‑old game can still surprise us with secret firepower. The exploit is a testament to the power of pure curiosity—no mods, no cheats, just a gamer refusing to kill a single NPC until the code itself gave up its secrets.
So, what's the takeaway? Never underestimate a pacifist's determination, and always expect Rockstar to have a few hidden wad‑of‑lead tricks up its digital sleeve. If you liked this deep dive, smash that share button, drop a comment, and most importantly—enable 2FA on all your accounts. Who knows? The next big exploit could be waiting in a game you thought was already fully mined.
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