Gamehacking.org

(often abbreviated GH.org) is the largest, longest-running, and most comprehensive database of video game cheat codes, patches, and hacking tools on the internet. Unlike generic cheat sites filled with pop-up ads and outdated, copy-pasted GameFAQs codes, GH.org is a curated, community-driven archive focusing on accuracy, version matching, and tool-assisted creation.

Alternatively, you can use generic memory editors like Cheat Engine, but GH.org doesn’t host those tools directly—it provides cheat tables ( .CT files) for Cheat Engine. GameHacking.org

As the gaming industry shifts toward live-service models, cloud gaming, and stricter anti-cheat systems (like kernel-level anticheat on PC), traditional cheat codes are becoming rarer. However, the demand for single-player enhancements remains strong. Modding communities thrive on PC, and emulation is bigger than ever thanks to projects like Steam Deck and retro handhelds. (often abbreviated GH

Need a specific example? Let me know the system and game name, and I’ll walk you through finding or converting a working code. As the gaming industry shifts toward live-service models,

The rise of emulation (RetroArch, Dolphin, PPSSPP, MAME) has been a massive driver of traffic to . Emulators have built-in cheat engines, but they need code values. GH provides the raw data.

The sheer volume of the site's coverage makes it an invaluable historical archive. The database spans generations of home consoles, handhelds, and obscure digital architectures: Generation / Era Supported Hardware Ecosystems

The platform is best known for its extensive collections of: