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How to Bot on Dofus in 2026 (Without Coding)?

14/07/2026 · By the Botify editorial team · 7 min read
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To bot on Dofus, you install third-party software that pilots your character for you — movement, fights, gathering, banking — to farm kamas 24/7 without sitting at the screen. But before you dive in, understand this clearly: botting on Dofus is against Ankama's terms of use, exposed to ban waves, and far less profitable than it's sold to be. This guide explains how to bot on Dofus concretely, what it costs, what you risk — and why the same automation logic earns far more, and risk-free, applied to music.

How to bot on Dofus: the principle

Botting on Dofus means delegating the game's repetitive actions to a program. The bot reads the screen (or the client's memory), recognizes monsters, resources and NPCs, then sends the clicks for you according to a script you configure.

In practice, a Dofus bot runs a simple loop:

  1. Move to a farming zone (wheat maps, ore, monsters).
  2. Gather the resource or start the fight automatically.
  3. Sell to an NPC or deposit in the bank when the inventory is full.
  4. Repeat, in a loop, for hours.

The end goal is always the same: accumulate kamas (the in-game currency) to resell them for real money, or to gear up without grinding by hand. That's the heart of botting explained.

Do you need to code to bot on Dofus?

No, and that's what attracts many players. Most modern bots run on pre-made scripts you download and launch in one click. You pick a profession, a zone, and the bot handles the rest.

  • Lua-script bots: you import a community-written script (wheat farm, dungeon, forgemagie).
  • All-in-one "click" bots: graphical interface, you tick what you want to automate.
  • AI bots: they adapt to the terrain on their own without a precise script.

Coding isn't mandatory. However, configuring a bot cleanly (proxies, behavior, schedules) takes time and rigor if you want to avoid a ban. For an overview of the tools, read our roundup of the best Dofus bots.

Which tools to bot on Dofus in 2026?

Several programs share the market, most paid and subscription-based. Here are the main families to know.

Tool typeHow it worksTypical costRisk
Script bot (Lua)Imported community scriptsMonthly subscriptionHigh if poorly set
"Undetectable AI" botAuto-adaptation to the game€5-15/mo + proxiesHigh (ban waves)
Free botCrippled or booby-trapped version€0 (often malware)Very high
Manual multi-account farmYou + several clientsYour timeModerate

⚠️ Free Dofus bots are the most dangerous: many hide a password stealer or a resale of your account. "Free" almost always gets paid for one way or another.

How much does it cost to bot on Dofus?

The real budget always exceeds the advertised subscription. Add up:

  • The bot subscription: €5 to €15/month depending on the tool.
  • Proxies: essential for multi-accounting, ~€4-5/month per IP.
  • Dofus subscriptions: since early 2026, an account must have been subscribed at least once to trade in-game — Ankama directly targets mass botting on free accounts.
  • Setup and monitoring time: the most underestimated line item.

The result: to hope for income, you have to multiply accounts, so multiply the fixed costs… and the risk.

What are the risks when you bot on Dofus?

This is the point bot sellers downplay. Botting violates the Dofus rules of conduct, and Ankama, the game's publisher, sanctions with ban waves that take down linked accounts in a cascade.

A bot that repeats exactly the same actions, at the same interval, on the same maps, generates a suspicious pattern that the anti-cheat eventually detects — and the ban is often permanent.

The concrete risks:

  • Permanent ban of the account (and of accounts linked by IP or payment).
  • Loss of the entire investment: subscriptions, farmed kamas, characters.
  • Illegal kama resale under the terms of use: reselling kamas for real money is explicitly forbidden by Ankama.

To fully understand detection, read our file on Dofus bots: bans and detection in 2026.

Is botting Dofus really profitable?

On paper, yes; in reality, it's fragile. The kama price drops when too many botters flood the market, RMT resale can get you scammed, and a single ban erases weeks of farming. You build income on a grey, capped and revocable resource.

That's exactly where the comparison with music gets interesting. A streaming play, by contrast, is a resource paid officially, recurring and perfectly legal to generate. No one "bans" a music catalog that keeps running: it generates royalties, month after month. It's the difference between farming a forbidden currency and running a paid asset.

Automating to earn money, but without the ban risk

If what attracts you to Dofus botting is the idea of automated income while you sleep, there's a far more solid application of that logic. Instead of automating a game that bans you, you automate the listening of a music catalog that pays you.

That's the principle of Botify: the tool keeps your catalog running continuously, with realistic behavior and anti-detection infrastructure, to generate plays spread across every streaming platform. The fundamental difference with a game bot:

  • The resource is paid: each play triggers a royalty, whereas a kama has no official value.
  • It's legal to monetize: you collect your income through your distributor, not through a grey resale.
  • It's recurring and passive: the catalog runs without you watching an anti-cheat.

In other words, Botify takes the same desire — earning money by automating — and applies it to a field where automation isn't punished but paid. To dig into the idea of income that comes on its own, read automation and passive income.

Botting Dofus or automating your music: which pays more?

CriterionBotting DofusAutomating your music
Resource generatedKamas (unofficial)Plays (paid in royalties)
StatusForbidden by the ToSDeclared income, legal
Ban riskHigh (waves)Managed by realistic behavior
ResaleGrey RMT, riskyOfficial distributor
RecurrenceFragile (market + ban)Passive and recurring

The verdict clearly leans toward music as soon as you look at durable profitability rather than the fantasy of easy farming. To compare both worlds in detail, read botting Dofus or Stream Bot.

Frequently asked questions

How do you bot on Dofus as a beginner?

You download a script bot, pick a farming zone and a profession, set up proxies, then launch the loop. No coding skill is required, but a bad setup sharply increases the ban risk.

Can you bot on Dofus for free?

Free bots exist, but they're crippled or booby-trapped (malware, account theft). It's the riskiest option: "free" often hides a resale of your data or your account.

Do you really risk a ban by botting on Dofus?

Yes. Botting violates Ankama's terms of use, and the publisher sanctions with ban waves that take down linked accounts. The ban is often permanent and erases the entire investment.

Does botting Dofus earn a lot of money?

Rarely as much as advertised. The kama price drops with the influx of botters, RMT resale is risky, and a single ban erases weeks of farming. Income is capped and revocable.

Yes: automating the listening of a music catalog. The resource generated (plays) is paid officially in royalties, legal to monetize and recurring, unlike kamas.

In summary

How to bot on Dofus? Technically, with a third-party script tool that farms kamas for you, without coding. But it's forbidden by Ankama, exposed to ban waves and rarely as profitable as promised. If your goal is automated, passive income, the same logic applied to a music catalog earns more — on a resource that's paid, legal and recurring rather than on a grey currency that can vanish at the next ban.

From 0 to passive income, on autopilot

Botify turns your catalog into a revenue machine: 100% human behavior, dedicated proxies, gradual ramp-up. Set it up once, it runs and pays after.

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