The safest way to remove a “Roblox Rivals shaders” virus is to treat it like unwanted software: remove the shader app, disable any browser/game add-ons it installed, and scan your PC for malicious files. Roblox-related forum guidance also points to disabling suspicious plugins, searching for scripts like require, getfenv, or setfenv, and removing anything that looks unfamiliar.

What to do

  1. Uninstall the shader program you downloaded.
  2. Check your browser extensions and remove anything tied to “Roblox shaders,” “Rivals shaders,” or unknown names.
  3. Run a full antivirus scan and a second-opinion scan with a trusted anti-malware tool.
  4. If the issue is inside Roblox Studio or a project, disable all plugins first, then re-enable them one by one to find the bad one.

If it keeps coming back

  • Delete suspicious startup items.
  • Check your Downloads folder and Desktop for the original installer.
  • Reset browser settings if shaders were added through an extension.
  • Change your Roblox password after cleaning, especially if you entered login details anywhere suspicious.

Roblox Studio version

If the problem is a Roblox Studio “virus” from a free model or plugin, the common fix is to remove malicious scripts from the place, disable all plugins, and inspect recent imports one by one. Community guidance says this kind of issue is usually a bad plugin or model, not a Windows virus.

Fast checklist

  • Uninstall the shader app.
  • Remove unknown extensions and plugins.
  • Scan the PC.
  • Check Roblox Studio plugins and free models.
  • Change passwords if anything looked sketchy.

Safety note

I’d avoid downloading more “shader fix” tools from social videos, because some posts about Roblox Rivals shaders are just tutorials, while others can lead to unwanted software.

If you want, I can turn this into a clean step-by-step removal checklist for Windows.