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The developers, Naxeex LLC , took the feedback from this alpha build and refined it. They fixed the clipping (mostly). They added jets, tanks, and aliens. They turned the empty city into a vibrant, interactive world.

| Feature | Real 0.1 Indicator | Fake/Updated Version | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Exactly 38.2 MB | > 100 MB | | Menu Screen | Black background, white text, no logo | Colored background with 3D title | | First Weapon | A squeaky hammer in your right hand | A baseball bat or pistol | | Map Name | "Sandbox_Test" in the pause menu | "OpenWorld_City" | | Ragdoll Sound | A distinct "crunch" upon landing | Muffled thud | The Legacy: From 0.1 to a Cultural Icon It is easy to dismiss Dude Theft Wars 0.1 as a broken demo. But without this raw, untamed foundation, the game would never have evolved into the parody masterpiece it is today.

So go ahead. Find that old .apk. Load it up on a dusty Android tablet. Punch a random citizen. Watch him glitch through the Earth’s core. And smile—because this is where the legend began. Have you played Dude Theft Wars 0.1? Share your glitch stories in the comments below. And for more retro mobile deep dives, subscribe to our newsletter.

But for the purists? The 0.1 build remains the definitive edition—where every glitch was a feature, and every play session generated a unique, shareable story. If you are a modern gamer seeking 60fps, 4K textures, and fluid combat, Dude Theft Wars 0.1 will disappoint you. It is ugly, broken, and unstable.