Click.

Hours bled into minutes. Elias finished the haul in six hours. Then he asked for more work. He reorganized the inventory logs, spotting errors that had cost the company thousands. He fixed the conveyor belt motor with a wrench and a paperclip. He was solving problems before they happened.

To execute third-party code (cheats/hacks) within a game's process.

He retreated to the locker room, locking the stall door behind him. He pulled the Perx Injector from his boot.

It uses WriteProcessMemory to write the path of the malicious/modded DLL into the newly allocated memory space.

He pushed through the rusted metal door, the bell long since smashed, and found Doc Rainer hunched over a workbench. The air smelled of ozone and stale solder.

The red light on the Injector pulsed, urging him. Optimize. Improve. Remove the waste.

PerX serves as a "loader" that forces a target process to load a Dynamic Link Library (DLL) file that was not originally part of its code. This allows the injected code to run within the target's memory space, providing access to internal variables, functions, and resources.