Sadrian-v3rmillion
The most persistent allegation? Rival exploiters claimed Sadrian’s UI layouts were heavily inspired (or directly copied) from a lesser-known GitHub repository belonging to a user named “Halal.” Sadrian’s typical response was stoic, often just a single line: “Code speaks for itself.” The "Exposure" Incident The most infamous chapter in the Sadrian saga occurred in late 2021. A moderator on a sister forum, Robeats Community , doxxed an email address associated with Sadrian’s PayPal. This led to a cascade of speculation.
In the annals of online subcultures, few communities were as simultaneously reviled and fascinating as v3rmillion. Before its eventual collapse and domain decay, the forum was the Kremlin of Roblox cheating—a place where Lua scripts were weapons, “synapse X” was king, and the line between white-hat vulnerability research and outright griefing blurred into nothingness.
Sadrian denied the backdoor claims, stating it was "anti-leech" code that only triggered if the script was run on a free executor. The damage, however, was done. His final post on v3rmillion, dated February 14th, 2022, was a simple GIF of a door closing. When v3rmillion began its slow death—domain expirations, database corruption, the exodus to Discord—Sadrian vanished. Sadrian-v3rmillion
Young, aspiring scripters viewed his UI modules as the holy grail. They would beg for "open source" permission, attempting to decompile his obfuscated code to learn how he bypassed the StarterGui limitations. His profile on v3rmillion was littered with "rep" (reputation points), largely from users awestruck by his visual polish.
Among the pantheon of exploiters, sellers, and skids, one name has persisted in whispers and archived screenshots: . The most persistent allegation
Veterans of the forum accused him of being “all show, no go.” Critics argued that while his interfaces were beautiful, the underlying scripts were generic—teleports, speed walks, and ESPs that any halfway decent scripter could write in five minutes. They called him a "UI pimp" —a designer who dressed up common code in Armani suits.
By: Investigative Tech Desk
The community discovered that Sadrian was allegedly not a solo act, but a using a single account to farm reputation. Worse, for his paying customers, evidence surfaced suggesting that the "VIP" version of his UI library contained a remote backdoor—a script that would disable competitors' clients if it detected them running simultaneously.
The thread gets locked. The user gets banned. And the ghost of the UI king moves on. This led to a cascade of speculation