How To Do Inmard In Roblox Prison Life?

The Inmard glitch in Roblox: Prison Life is one of the most mysterious and talked-about bugs in the game’s long history. Known for turning a player into an inmate who still looks and acts like a guard, Inmard has fascinated players for years with its strange mix of luck, timing, and randomness. Though not officially supported and extremely rare, many Prison Life veterans have tried to replicate the glitch using a series of rejoining and respawning tricks. This guide explores everything known about the Inmard phenomenon — from what it does, how players have triggered it in older versions, and why it’s so elusive, to the risks and best practices for experimenting with it safely.

How players have reported triggering it (the “method”)

There’s no official route — the glitch is RNG-based and unreliable. The repeatedly-reported method players used in older versions:

  1. Join a Prison Life session as normal (typically as an inmate or neutral).
  2. Kill innocents / neutral NPCs / repeatedly die and rejoin — players described repeatedly killing innocents, respawning, and rejoining the server multiple times to try to trigger the state where the game gives inmate status while retaining guard items. The Fandom entry explicitly calls it an RNG method of killing innocents and rejoining until it happens.
  3. If it triggers, you’ll appear as an inmate visually but have guard clothing/items in your backpack/UI (e.g., taser/handcuffs visuals or guard outfit). This is what the community calls “Inmard.”

What you’ll actually see / behavior

  • You remain on the Inmate team (can be targeted like other inmates), but your avatar looks like a guard and may have guard items in the backpack/UI.
  • The glitch can be visually confusing to other players and may affect how guards/inmates interact with you.

Why it’s rare and unreliable

  • The game code likely had an edge case race/RNG when assigning team and outfit/backpack items; community reports call it “obscure” and dependent on repeated rejoining/respawning. There’s no guaranteed trigger.
  • Over years, game updates and anti-exploit measures may have patched or made it even rarer. Many community threads mention exploiters and game changes that broke older glitches. If you don’t see it, that’s expected.

Risks, rules, and ethics — important

  • Using glitches to gain an advantage or to impersonate another team (e.g., looking like a guard while an inmate) can be considered exploiting. That can get you kicked, banned from servers, or reported by other players — and can violate Roblox or the game creator’s rules. Do not use glitches to harass, steal keycards, deceive players, or break the game.
  • Roblox’s platform rules and individual game rules generally prohibit exploiting. I strongly recommend not intentionally seeking to abuse such a glitch in competitive or public matches.

If you still want to experiment

  • Try this only in private servers with friends who consent and for testing/educational purposes — not on public servers. That avoids hurting other players’ experience and reduces the chance of reports/penalties.
  • Record what you do (clips) so you can show the developer if you think you found a reproducible bug — many devs appreciate bug reports done respectfully. If you do report it, include exact steps, timestamps, and the server ID.

How to “undo” or get back to normal

  • In most cases, simply leaving and rejoining the server or dying/respawning will restore your normal outfit/team assignment. If the state persists, rejoin another server or relaunch Roblox. This aligns with the RNG/rejoin nature of the glitch.

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