Open your preferred version (often 1.8.9 for PvP) and join a server.
Tuke Client hovered like a ghostly HUD. He had already calibrated the "Phase" module, setting the bypass values to match the server's specific tick rate. To any observer, he was just a lone player standing in the dark. To the server’s code, he was becoming a ghost. "The Tuke Client doesn't just break the rules, Jax," Silas whispered, his fingers dancing over the keys. "It rewrites them." He stepped forward. The obsidian, usually a hard, impenetrable boundary, felt like thick smoke. His character model flickered—a stutter in the matrix. One block deep. Two blocks. The "NoCheatPlus" alert on the admin’s dashboard was likely screaming, but the Tuke Client was feeding the server "legitimate" movement packets, tricking it into thinking Silas was just lagging in place. Suddenly, the screen turned a blinding white. The vault interior was filled with the glow of a hundred beacons. In the center sat the "Dragon’s Heart"—the only remaining dragon egg on the server. "I’m in," Silas said, his voice flat with adrenaline. "Get it and get out!" Jax urged. Silas grabbed the egg. But as he turned to phase back through the wall, a message appeared in the global chat: [Admin] Warden: Interesting move, Silas. Let's see if Tuke can bypass a hard-reset. The floor beneath Silas vanished. The Tuke Client’s tuke client
(if applicable)
Used on specific servers to bypass certain block collisions. Installation and Usage Open your preferred version (often 1
Locate the Tuke.exe file and run it with administrator privileges to allow it to interact with the Minecraft process. To any observer, he was just a lone