Peroxide Script • Safe
This allows modders to simulate "what-if" scenarios (damage prediction, UI previews, network rollback) without cluttering the live game state. It’s like Git for game variables. Most scripting languages pause the world to clean up memory. Peroxide uses reactive reference counting with a twist: objects self-destruct when their last stable reference disappears. The Bleach Operator creates ephemeral references that vanish automatically after the current frame.
Is it the future of modding? Possibly for multiplayer, competitive, or simulation-heavy games. For a simple UI script? Probably overkill. Peroxide Script
For two decades, modding has been a war between accessibility and power. Lua is friendly but slow. C++ is fast but unforgiving. Peroxide Script, a new open-source embedded scripting language, claims to offer the best of both worlds—with a chemical twist. This allows modders to simulate "what-if" scenarios (damage
// To commit the bleach back: enemy_health <-! preview // Stabilizes the change Peroxide uses reactive reference counting with a twist:
But what makes it "peroxide"? The name hints at its core mechanism: . Let’s break it down. 1. The Bleach Operator: !> The headline feature of Peroxide is the Bleach Operator ( !> ). In traditional scripting, if you modify an object, all references see that change. In Peroxide, mutation is opt-in and temporary .