Yes. Technically. But so is using a guide. So is looking up a map.

Yasu allows you to browse, create, and manage cheat codes for a massive library of emulators and native games. But here is the kicker: The "Live Search" Magic The feature that makes Yasu truly addictive is the Live Memory Scanner .

Enter —a cheat code editor that isn't just for cheaters. It’s for the tinkerers, the speedrunners, and the digital archaeologists. What is Yasu? If you’re imagining a dusty hex editor that requires a computer science degree to operate, think again. Yasu is a modern, intuitive cheat engine and code manager. Think of it as the Photoshop of game manipulation, but instead of editing pixels, you’re editing reality.

Remember the rush of punching in the Konami Code? Up, up, down, down, left, right, left, right, B, A, Start.

Have you used Yasu to do something hilariously broken? Drop a comment below or share your best "memory hack" story.

Whether you are a speedrunner looking for TAS-like manipulation, a dad who only has 45 minutes to play Chrono Trigger and just wants to see the ending, or a curious developer wanting to see how collision detection really works—Yasu is for you.

Now, fast forward 30 years. We have 4K ray tracing, open worlds the size of small countries, and difficulty curves designed by masochists. But we lost something along the way: the easy ability to peek under the hood .

That feeling wasn't just about winning. It was about just enough to see what happens. It was about power. It was about curiosity.