A feature-rich third-party modification for Gorilla Tag. Built with full transparency — every field we collect is documented, every feature is disclosed.
What's inside
DTASLOI ships with features that are honest about what they do — and why.
Transparency
Every piece of data that could be collected is listed publicly. No surprises, ever.
Official Statement
There has been deliberate misinformation spread about DTASLOI. Here's the full picture.
It starts with BDILI — the predecessor to DTASLOI. A competing mod checker developer named Sakuraa publicly labeled BDILI as a virus and malware. The timing is not a coincidence.
Roughly a week before that announcement, Sakuraa had launched his own mod checker — one that nobody was using. BDILI was the competition. The "malware" label was a strategic hit, not a technical finding.
That's where the "RAT" narrative came from. It was manufactured to destroy a competing product, not based on any real analysis of the code.
History repeating itself. DTASLOI is the successor to BDILI — and it's gaining traction. Sakuraa has now flagged DTASLOI as a red flag by adding it to a list of "illegal mods."
The problem: DTASLOI contains no illegal mods. The only relevant flag is the base DLL — which every single mod shares, because all mods carry some inherent risk of triggering a platform ban. That is not unique to DTASLOI, and it is not a legitimate reason to call it illegal.
This is the same playbook as before: label the competition as dangerous to drive users away from it.
This is where it gets ironic. Sakuraa's own mod checker has been found to collect Player IDs — a data point that can be used to track players and look them up on external player trackers.
Collecting Player IDs for tracking purposes is widely considered a cheating behavior within the Gorilla Tag community. The very tool being used to call others unsafe is itself doing something arguably worse — with less transparency about it.
Yes. DTASLOI does not steal your information, does not present actual malware, and does not perform any hidden actions. Every piece of data it collects is documented publicly — you're reading a page built specifically for that purpose.
Telemetry is required to use the mod, and that's disclosed upfront. What it collects, why it collects it, and how it's structured is all listed in the Terms of Service. There are no surprises.
If someone tells you DTASLOI is a RAT or malware, ask them to show you the code or a technical breakdown. They won't be able to — because that evidence doesn't exist.