You generally can’t trade with bots in Adopt Me safely or legitimately the way you trade with normal players. Public posts and guides mostly describe two different things: bots that spam, farm, or auto-trade, and the normal in-game trade system where you trade with a real player through the menu.

What people mean by “bots”

In Adopt Me discussions, “bots” usually refers to automated or suspicious accounts, not an official feature for trading. Some community posts also describe “trade bots” as accounts that use preset messages to simulate a trading system, but that is still player-run automation, not a built-in Adopt Me feature.

How normal trading works

To trade in Adopt Me, you click the player, choose Trade , and then complete the trade through the game’s trade interface. A newer trading flow mentioned in a recent guide lets players suggest pets by requesting access to someone’s backpack, but the trade still depends on the other player’s approval.

Safe way to think about bots

If someone is advertising a “bot” that will trade for you, be cautious. Posts about Adopt Me bots often involve automation, scams, black-market trading, or scripts that may violate game rules and put your account at risk.

Practical advice

  • Trade only with real players you trust.
  • Never share your password or account details.
  • Avoid third-party “bot” scripts or off-platform trading tools.
  • Use the in-game trade buttons and confirm every item carefully.

Bottom line

If your goal is to get better pets, the safest path is regular player-to- player trading, not bots. Bot-based trading is usually either unofficial automation or a scam risk, and it may get accounts flagged or banned.

Would you like a simple step-by-step guide for trading safely in Adopt Me?