Parallel Space 32-bit Support 64-bit Support - Virtual Spaces -no Root- - Gameguardian
While Parallel Space is the most famous, it is often heavy on resources and has aggressive ads. For GameGuardian usage, experienced users often prefer these alternatives which handle 64-bit games better without root:
| Feature | 32-Bit Parallel Space | 64-Bit Parallel Space | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | GameGuardian Compatibility | High (fully functional) | Low (unstable, limited scans) | | App Support | Older apps, lightweight games | Modern apps, high-end games | | Performance | Lower RAM usage | Higher RAM usage | | Stability | May crash on 64-bit-only system libs | More stable for 64-bit apps |
Users seeking to use GameGuardian without root must ensure that both the target game and Parallel Space are running in 32-bit mode. This often requires downloading legacy versions of Parallel Space (e.g., v3.x) or using alternative virtual space apps like "X8 Sandbox" or "VirtualXposed," which explicitly offer 32-bit compatibility. While Parallel Space is the most famous, it
GameGuardian (GG) is a popular memory editing tool used to modify game values (e.g., currency, health, speed). Traditionally, GG requires root access to scan and modify the memory of other processes because Android's security model isolates app memory spaces.
How does "no root" work with Parallel Space? Parallel Space offers a "no root" mode for GameGuardian by exploiting a vulnerability in the virtual space environment. Because Parallel Space runs as the same Linux user (UID) as the cloned app within its sandbox, it can theoretically allow GG to attach to the cloned app’s process without system-level root. However, this is architecture-dependent: | Feature | 32-Bit Parallel Space | 64-Bit
This is the gold standard for no-root modding. Instead of just cloning apps, VMOS runs a complete Android ROM inside your phone. You can run Android 5.1 (32-bit) inside an Android 14 (64-bit) phone.
Use Parallel Space (32-bit) if:
Use Parallel Space (64-bit) if:
Do NOT use Parallel Space if:
Parallel Space provides a convenient "no root" virtual environment for cloning apps, but its utility for advanced memory editing like GameGuardian hinges entirely on architecture support. 32-bit virtual spaces remain the only reliable method for running GameGuardian without root due to predictable memory mapping and mature tooling. Conversely, 64-bit virtual spaces offer better compatibility with modern apps but sacrifice the deep memory access required for game hacking. Users must therefore choose between performance and functionality, understanding that the era of 32-bit mobile computing is rapidly fading, and with it, the ease of no-root memory editing.