Da Hood uses server-side hit detection for weapons. Even if you change your local character size, the server ignores it. A true hitbox change requires exploiting Roblox’s network ownership or injecting into the server process — which is detectable and bannable.
Let’s analyze the time cost of searching for a small hitbox script.
| Activity | Time Spent | | :--- | :--- | | Searching for "Roblox Da Hood Small Hitbox Script Pastebin" on Google/YouTube | 10 minutes | | Testing 10 different Pastebin links (most are broken) | 45 minutes | | Re-downloading an executor because the old one is patched | 20 minutes | | Getting banned and starting over on a new account | 2 hours+ | | Total wasted time | 3+ hours | Roblox Da Hood Small Hitbox Script Pastebin
In those three hours, you could have:
The script hunt is a treadmill to nowhere. Da Hood uses server-side hit detection for weapons
Da Hood’s urban environment is full of half-walls, car gaps, and staircases. Use these for head glitches (shooting over cover while exposing minimal body). This is a legit "small hitbox" technique.
Most Pastebin scripts fall into three categories: The script hunt is a treadmill to nowhere
A small hitbox script is a piece of Lua code (the programming language of Roblox) that forces the game to shrink your character’s hitbox to an unnaturally small size. In extreme cases, cheaters can compress their hitbox to the size of a single stud—or even make it disappear entirely.
What this looks like in-game:
This creates a god-like effect. Users of the script believe they are untouchable.