In Roblox, an game is one where the creator has explicitly allowed others to open, edit, and reuse the game's assets and scripts.

The game's popularity stems from its fast-paced, "easy to understand, hard to master" movement system. Developers often seek uncopylocked versions to reverse-engineer these specific features:

What sets nico's nextbots apart is the personality of the chasers. The Nextbots are iconic internet memes or bizarre, edited images. From Obunga (a distorted edit of Barack Obama) to Selene Delgado and Quandi , the terror comes from the uncanny valley effect of seeing a familiar meme face distorted and screaming a loud audio file while closing in on you.

In the vast, user-generated universe of Roblox, few genres have exploded in popularity quite like "Nextbots." These chaotic, AI-chasing memes have defined a specific era of Roblox horror and comedy. Among the thousands of variations, one title stands as the titan of the genre: .

If you cannot get the official game uncopylocked, how do you learn to make a game like it? Here is the professional approach:

The premise is deceptively simple. Players are dropped into a surreal, often liminal map—such as a sprawling hotel, a parking garage, or a mall. They are armed with limited tools (like a noisemaker or a Bloxy Cola for speed) and must survive being hunted by "Nextbots."

: The game features complex player movement like bunny hopping (b-hopping) and sliding, which are essential for outrunning faster bots like Sanic.

: Nextbots use advanced pathfinding logic to navigate environments smoothly. Unlike traditional bots that use node graphs, these are inspired by the Source Engine's "NavMesh" system.

Unlike standard Roblox NPCs, Nextbots don't have bodies. They are 2D images (sprites) that slide across the floor, always facing the player. They navigate the map using pathfinding AI, meaning they can corner players in hallways and chase them up stairs.