
Game intel
Bully
A minimalist, multiplayer game where you are Bully, the only ball in the world who can play soccer. Host or join sessions for quick, laid-back matches with fri…
This caught my attention because Bully is the one Rockstar game that’s felt frozen in time. No remaster, no sequel-just a cult classic we all remember for slingshot duels behind the gym and English class word-scrambles. Nearly two decades after the 2006 PS2 launch (and the 2008 Scholarship Edition on PC), it’s not Rockstar reviving Bullworth Academy-it’s the fans. A community-driven project led by YouTuber SWEGTA has shipped Bully: Multiplayer Mod, an online layer for the PC Scholarship Edition that lets players squad up, jump into mini-games, and even roleplay their way through schoolyard politics.
Let’s be clear: this isn’t an official patch. Bully: Multiplayer Mod uses the PC version of Bully: Scholarship Edition as its base and syncs players into the same world. The core hook is hanging out at Bullworth together—think impromptu fistfights on the football field, BMX races down Old Bullworth Vale, and organized events hosted by server admins. Mini-games are a natural fit; Scholarship Edition added extra classes like Biology, Music, Math, and Geography to the original Chemistry and English, and the mod aims to make that shared chaos playable online. There’s also the roleplay angle—custom characters, cliques, and school rules enforced (or gleefully broken) by the community.
SWEGTA isn’t a random name here—he’s been a consistent voice in the Bully scene, chronicling rumors around the long-whispered Bully 2 and dissecting Rockstar’s history with the game. Seeing him front a multiplayer mod gives this project credibility within that fanbase. It’s the kind of grassroots effort Bully fans have wanted since we all realized Rockstar’s attention is glued to GTA 6.
Bully sits in a weird place in Rockstar’s catalog: beloved, singular, and perpetually sidelined. It’s more mischievous than mean, more structured than Grand Theft Auto, and still one of the best “small-scale sandbox” designs out there. The world is compact but dense—go-kart tracks, boxing tournaments, prank tools like marbles and stink bombs, the social hierarchies of jocks, nerds, greasers, and preppies—and that translates beautifully to emergent multiplayer stories. If GTA RP servers turned Los Santos into a theater stage, Bully’s campus could be a tight, character-driven improv set.

There’s also a broader trend here. Rockstar formally embraced the roleplay crowd by partnering with the team behind FiveM and RedM in 2023. That suggests an understanding—if not outright support—that community-driven experiences keep old worlds alive. Bully never had that chance. If this mod sticks, it could become the de facto way to experience Bullworth in 2025: not as a solitary nostalgia trip, but as a social space with house rules and shared drama.
Here’s the sober bit. Fan servers live and die by volunteer time, patch discipline, and moderation. Expect occasional desync, rubber-banding bikes, and the odd physics freak-out. Scholarship Edition’s PC build is decent now but never flawless, and netcode bolted onto an old single-player game will have quirks. Don’t expect anti-cheat on par with AAA live service either; RP communities rely on admin vigilance and sensible server rules.

There’s also the elephant in the cafeteria: Rockstar’s and Take-Two’s complicated history with mods. While they’ve opened the door for GTA/RDR roleplay, they’ve also swung the C&D hammer on reverse-engineering projects in the past. A mod that adds online functionality to an old Rockstar title sits in a gray zone. If the project steers clear of distributing game assets and focuses on original code that requires a legit PC copy, it has a better chance of longevity—but nothing is guaranteed. If you dive in, enjoy it for what it is right now, not a promise of a permanent service.
You’ll need the PC Scholarship Edition—the mod is built around it. Look for active servers with clear rulesets if you’re chasing RP, or hop into free-roam spots if you just want to mess around with boxing, bike races, and class challenges. The best experiences will come from communities that lean into Bully’s vibe: consequence-light hijinks, cliques with personality, and comedic conflict rather than no-clip chaos.

If you’re nostalgic for the original’s tone—a coming-of-age story told through pranks and punch-ups—this scratches that itch better than any 4K remaster ever could. Rockstar may not be ready to say the words “Bully 2,” but the community just built the next best thing: a reason to return to Bullworth with friends, create trouble, and make memories in a world that deserved a longer life.
A fan-made Bully: Multiplayer Mod brings online play, mini-games, and RP to the PC Scholarship Edition, led by YouTuber SWEGTA. It’s scrappy, community-driven, and exactly the kind of second life Bullworth needed—just keep expectations realistic and remember that fan projects can be fragile.
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