Ragdoll Engine gained its massive following by leaning into the hilarity of Roblox’s physics [1]. Players spend their time diving off skyscrapers, launching themselves from cannons, or interacting with push-and-pull mechanics that turn their avatars into limp noodles [1, 5]. It is a social "hangout" game where the spectacle of a high-velocity collision is the main attraction [1, 5]. Enter the "Bruh Hub"
The relationship between Ragdoll Engine and script hubs like Bruh Hub has always been a "cat and mouse" game [7]. While many players used these tools for harmless fun—like jumping ten times higher than normal—others used them to disrupt servers, leading to a constant cycle of and script patches [7, 8]. Developers frequently implemented anti-cheat measures to block Bruh Hub, only for the script creators to find new workarounds days later [7, 8].
Features like "Kill All" or "Fling," which could instantly collapse every other player on the server into a ragdoll state [3, 6].
Options to change size, gravity, or appearance beyond what the game’s official store allowed [4]. The Game of Cat and Mouse