The developer, Someone Like You studio, has patched this three times. Each time, the community finds a new workaround (currently: starting the game while seated on a low stool, then standing mid-tip-off). It is a digital arms race. Perhaps the most elegant hack is psychological. In Gym Class VR , your headset’s microphone is live by default. Savvy players use the Echo Feint : they turn their head toward an empty corner of the court while shouting “I’m open!” into the mic, causing the opposing defender to glance away—just long enough for a no-look pass to cut through the lane.

“I didn’t want to do it at first,” admits a player who goes by , a top-50 ranked user. “But when everyone in the competitive lobby is doing it, you either adapt or you get dunked on by a twelve-year-old from Ohio.” The Height Slider Glitch Then there is the Height Slider Glitch —a more controversial maneuver. Gym Class VR calibrates your in-game height based on your real-world floor level. But players discovered that by crouching during the initial calibration, then standing up afterward, their avatar becomes a seven-foot giant. Suddenly, rebounds are automatic. Blocks feel like swatting flies.

After 45 minutes of play, the player who hasn’t hacked their height—but has hacked their own fatigue—starts hitting every shot. Their arms don’t shake. Their lungs don’t burn. In VR, the final boss is always your own body.

There is a moment, about 30 seconds into a heated match of Gym Class VR , when the physics feel wrong. Not glitchy— wrong . The avatar across from you, a lanky silhouette in a neon headband, releases the basketball from half-court. The arc is impossibly flat, a line drive with no business touching nylon. Yet, the net snaps. Again. And again.

By Alex Cross

Gym Class Vr | Hacks

The developer, Someone Like You studio, has patched this three times. Each time, the community finds a new workaround (currently: starting the game while seated on a low stool, then standing mid-tip-off). It is a digital arms race. Perhaps the most elegant hack is psychological. In Gym Class VR , your headset’s microphone is live by default. Savvy players use the Echo Feint : they turn their head toward an empty corner of the court while shouting “I’m open!” into the mic, causing the opposing defender to glance away—just long enough for a no-look pass to cut through the lane.

“I didn’t want to do it at first,” admits a player who goes by , a top-50 ranked user. “But when everyone in the competitive lobby is doing it, you either adapt or you get dunked on by a twelve-year-old from Ohio.” The Height Slider Glitch Then there is the Height Slider Glitch —a more controversial maneuver. Gym Class VR calibrates your in-game height based on your real-world floor level. But players discovered that by crouching during the initial calibration, then standing up afterward, their avatar becomes a seven-foot giant. Suddenly, rebounds are automatic. Blocks feel like swatting flies. Gym Class Vr Hacks

After 45 minutes of play, the player who hasn’t hacked their height—but has hacked their own fatigue—starts hitting every shot. Their arms don’t shake. Their lungs don’t burn. In VR, the final boss is always your own body. The developer, Someone Like You studio, has patched

There is a moment, about 30 seconds into a heated match of Gym Class VR , when the physics feel wrong. Not glitchy— wrong . The avatar across from you, a lanky silhouette in a neon headband, releases the basketball from half-court. The arc is impossibly flat, a line drive with no business touching nylon. Yet, the net snaps. Again. And again. Perhaps the most elegant hack is psychological

By Alex Cross