Tibia bots in English

Tibia Bots

free bots and guides for Tibia

A A A

ElfBot Interface Screenshots

On this page you will find snapshots of almost every configuration panel in ElfBot. Each snapshot will have its entries filled with the kind of values it is awaiting from you and a general description will be provided to give you an overall view of ElfBot's capabilities.


The main bot panel containing buttons that open numerous subpanels and buttons for saving and loading settings on either of the 5 slots available for each character, or to/from a custom file. The panel can be hidden/unhidden by using the key combination Shift+F12.


Upon clicking on the Help button, a message such as this is displayed to help new users find their way around the bot the first time.


The auto-healing subpanel lets you setup how the bot will heal your character. You can set up to be healed with spells when your hp is high or low, through a UH rune, a health potion, a mana potion, how fast the bot will spam the heal to make sure it went through, and how long should it wait before starting to heal. You can also choose with which potions to restore the HP and MP of your allies, which is doable through a hotkey script.


The aimbot subpanel lets you configure how to set up the aiming system of the bot for things like comboing and choosing the best enemy. An aimbot tutorial has been written and it explains each of the options.


The lists subpanel lets you specify which players the bot should consider as friends and enemies, and subfriends and subenemies (less important). People with a + in front of them will be prioritized as prefered targets, and those with a ++ even more. Writing a guild name preceded by a * will add an entire guild to the list, but for this you need to have the "Player Info" HUD option running for the bot to be able to tell. If you are the leader of a party or a private chat channel, you can specify a keyword to auto-send invites to people that are on your sub/friend lists who message you with "inv party" or "inv channel", provided "inv" was the keyword.


The heads-up-display subpanel is the core for showing information on your screen, such as magic wall timers, active hotkeys, player information such as their hp, vocation and guild.


The extras subpanel lets you setup more general functionalities of the bot, such as enabling a framerate booster which increases your fps, viewining people names through floors, opening windows as small possible, etc.


The hotkeys subpanel is where the core bot flexibility, functionality, and control kicks in. Hotkeys let you control what the bot is doing at anytime by allowing you to run various commands at the press of a key like exivaing the last person you exivaed, or turning on and off small "auto" scripts which will assist you in your gameplay by running certain commands automatically, like uhing a friend only if his hp is low. It's the part of the bot that takes some time to get used to, but there is tons of examples and even a hotkey creation wizard to assist you at first.


The hotkey wizard walks you through some of the steps required to create a working hotkey command, which you'll be able to paste in the hotkey panel and assign a key to it.


The persistent commands are the same as regular hotkey commands with the difference that they are always active and thus do not require a key assigned to turn them on and off. On the screenshot are some more advanced scripts from a released icon set that complete it with special functionlity like counting and displaying the amount of items in your inventory.


The shortkeys subpanel lets you define shortkeys. Shortkey commands are the same as for hotkeys. The difference with a hotkey is that you'll not have to be press a key to run or enable the command, but instead you'll have to type a word in the default channel. With shortkeys being setup as in the screenshot, typing 'tt' and pressing enter in the default channel would take you to thais provided you are standing next to a boat captain.


The cavebot subpanel lets you create waypoints and actions that your character will perform in your cavebot script. It also lets you define the items you'll want to loot, the alarms to alert you when botting, and other options. Every option seen here is detailed in the cavebot tutorial.


The cavebot hotkey list is like the list of persistent hotkeys, with the difference that they are only enabled when the cavebot is running. Some good things to put here are healing for cavebotting only, mana training, alarms on low supplies, gold counter, etc.


The targeting subpanel lets you define how the bot should handle monsters that it encounters when cavebotting, but can also be used for manual hunting. Things that you can setup here is running at a distance, avoiding waves, parrying creatures for knights to get hit less, which runes and attacks to use, which monsters to attack first, etc. Everything is detailed in the targeting tutorial.


The navigation subpanel lets you connect to an external navigation server (navserv.exe, provided with ElfBot's installation, which one person needs to run) and displays the locations of your friends on the map or edge of screen, coordinates combo attacks, refills mana, etc.


The links subpanel lets other people connect on the character of another ElfBot user through his active connection with the Tibia Server to either spectate or assist him during gameplay.


The proxy subpanel lets you start or lets other people connect to an ElfBot proxy server, which will heal you if your connection cuts off or lags according to the settings that you specify.


The creature spy lists every monster and player that is being seen by client, on all floors and levels and some squares off-screen. Their position, health, speed and level equivalent is shown.


The icons subapanel lets you define icons, which are little pictures that appear on your client display which can have hotkey functionality assigned when left-mouse or right-moust clicked on. They can also display custom text and a numeral amount on them. The screenshot is of an Icon set for all vocations by J0han, which is a good example for learning how it works.