The proliferation of mobile strategy games, particularly player-versus-player (PvP) titles such as Mobile Strike (often abbreviated "MK" in community forums), has given rise to a parallel economy of automation scripts—colloquially known as "MK mobile scripts." These scripts range from benign auto-tappers to sophisticated exploit frameworks that manipulate game memory, network traffic, and client-side logic. This paper provides a systematic analysis of the technical architectures, distribution methods, ethical considerations, and countermeasure strategies associated with these scripts. We categorize script types, examine reverse engineering techniques used to defeat client-side protections, and evaluate the effectiveness of server-side validation as a defensive paradigm. Findings indicate that while basic automation scripts merely violate terms of service, advanced memory injection scripts constitute a genuine security threat with potential for financial fraud and account compromise.