Shuffling & Game Exploits: Why They Break Cricket 24
There’s a common trend in Cricket 24 that’s slowly eroding the spirit of the game: players shuffling across the crease and abusing field settings to exploit the game's limitations. While on the surface it may seem like clever strategy, in truth, it’s toxic behavior rooted in frustration and lack of skill.
Let’s call it what it is—shuffling is a crutch. It’s the go-to move for players who can’t read line and length, who can’t time the ball, and who would rather dance like confused flamingos than stand still and improve their actual gameplay. These players aren’t playing cricket; they’re playing loophole simulator.
For some, the only joy they get is from a cheap win. They don’t want to get better—they want to feel superior. And when their basic batting isn’t enough to get them there, they shuffle. It’s desperation disguised as innovation. They aren't adapting to the game; they are evading the challenge of cricket itself.
It doesn’t stop with shuffling. These same players will:
These tactics have no place in real cricket. They exist only to squeeze out wins in a broken system. And ironically, it's these players who scream the loudest that "Cricket 24 is a bad game." The truth is: they are the ones breaking it.
If these players simply stood still and learned to judge the ball, they would improve. Their timing would get better. Their confidence would grow. But improvement takes effort, and exploiting the system takes none. So, they choose the path of least resistance, dragging the entire community experience down with them.
Only then can we reclaim Cricket 24 as a competitive game rooted in skill—not exploits.
Let’s bring the soul of the game back. Cricket is about reading, reacting, timing, and adapting—not about dancing around like a bugged-out AI. Stop shuffling, start improving. Because the game deserves better. And so do you.