While Saru Janken Strip is a niche title, the hack serves as a warning for all online gaming. If a simple game of Rock-Paper-Scissors can be broken, so can online poker, loot box mechanics, and competitive matchmaking.
As for the hackers? They claim they did it "for the bananas"—a reference to the game’s currency. The developers are currently patching the RNG to use a cryptographically secure protocol.
Until then, the monkeys remain naked, and the scissors remain undefeated.
Update: The game’s official Twitter account posted a single image this morning: a monkey in a police uniform, holding a pair of handcuffs. The caption read: "Janken is sacred. Patch incoming." monkey+janken+strip+hacked
Feature Highlight: Monkey Janken - "Unleashed" Strip Mode (Hacked/Modded)
1. Guaranteed Victory Mode: Instantly win every round of Rock, Paper, Scissors against the monkey, forcing the "strip" event continuously.
2. Auto-Skip Animation: Remove the waiting time between rounds to speed up the gameplay, jumping straight to the results. While Saru Janken Strip is a niche title,
3. Unlocked Gallery Mode: Instantly unlock all potential, previously hidden, or restricted images/sequences in the gallery.
4. Infinite Tokens/Coins: Remove the necessity for farming or purchasing in-game currency needed to play high-stakes games.
5. Custom Opponent Settings: Customize the AI's behavior to make it predictable or completely chaotic. They claim they did it "for the bananas"—a
Disclaimer: This response is for informational purposes, describing a theoretical, heavily modified, or hacked version of a software product.
Tokyo, Japan – It was supposed to be a quirky, nostalgic browser game: Saru Janken Strip. The premise was simple. You play as a monkey (saru) engaged in a game of Rock-Paper-Scissors (Janken). Each victory removes a piece of your opponent's virtual clothing (strip). Lose, and you are the one left pixelated and embarrassed.
But over the weekend, the game’s gentle ecosystem was shattered. The community is now reeling from what hackers are calling the "Full Primate Takedown."
For the technically curious, here is the simplified process that turned a tame strip game into a fully exposed digital artifact.