: It featured a distinctive right-shift GUI (Graphical User Interface) that was highly customizable and praised for its clean design compared to contemporaries like Wurst or Wolfram.
: Jigsaw was the first client to introduce "Infinite Reach" via its "Infinite" TpAura mode, allowing players to strike targets from extreme distances that standard anti-cheats of that era struggled to detect.
In the sprawling, blocky universe of Minecraft, few tools have sparked as much debate as the . To the uninitiated, the name evokes images of puzzles and careful assembly. To server administrators, it is a four-letter word. To its users, it is the ultimate equalizer.
Jigsaw is not a mod for building pretty houses. It is a "utility client"—a euphemism for software that gives players an unfair advantage. While clients like Wurst and Impact dominate the anarchy scene, Jigsaw carved out a unique niche by blurring the line between architectural aid and competitive cheat.
What distinguishes a Jigsaw client from a typical enterprise software client is the .