resurrecting the fallen · crimson edition

Tap Ninja Save Editor Exclusive -

An addon for Meteor Client that resurrects rejected, removed, or ported features. Because some ideas never die—they just get rejected.

GitHub
58+
Modules
14+
Commands
520+
Commits
🔥 2026
Active

Modules

No modules found.

Commands

.center
.clear-chat
.ghost
.save-skin
.heads
.seed
.setblock
.panic
.set-velocity
.teleport
.terrain-export
.kick

Configuration Tweaks

HTTP Allowed
Restrict HTTP requests to trusted domains
Hidden Modules
Hide modules from GUI (restart required)
Load System Fonts
Disable for faster startup, use custom fonts
Duplicate Module Names
Allow overriding Meteor modules safely

Tap Ninja Save Editor Exclusive -

No single "official" save editor exists for , but you can modify your progress by manually editing the game's data files. This is typically done to recover lost progress, test builds, or adjust currency like Gold and Amber.

On iOS, due to sandboxing, accessing raw save files requires a jailbroken device or a file explorer app. On Steam (PC) , save files are often found in: C:\Users\[YourName]\AppData\LocalLow\TapNinja\ tap ninja save editor

4. PC vs. Mobile

The Steam version runs continuously while your PC is on, leading to faster progression than mobile. Consider switching platforms instead of cheating. No single "official" save editor exists for ,

Hex Editors: If the file appears as binary data (unreadable text), tools like the XVI32 Hex Editor can be used to manually overwrite specific binary values. On Steam (PC) , save files are often

This is technically save editing but without third-party tools—just copy/paste. No malware risk, no ban risk, and you still earn everything legitimately.

Tap Ninja Save Editor — Short Story

Kaito kept the Tap Ninja save file folded inside a thin, encrypted frame of memory the way collectors keep stamps: reverent, careful, private. The file wasn't just numbers. It was his history — the neon-splattered dojo he'd built over two winters, the lucky katana skins he’d traded for with in-game gold, the tiny roster of allies whose names he’d pasted into the margins of a notebook like talismans. After a long day of work he would open the game and tap until the world outside blinked out.