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This category is a list of video games with gameplay specifically designed to simulate computer hacking. For fictional hackers who appear in video games , see Category:Hackers in video games . Subcategories
This is a list of groups, both web-based and warez scene groups, which have attained notoriety outside of their respective communities. A plurality of warez groups operate within the so-called warez scene, though as of 2019 a large amount of software and game warez is now distributed first via the web. Leaks of releases from warez groups ...
For video games with gameplay specifically designed to simulate computer hacking, see Category:Hacking video games. Pages in category "Hackers in video games" The following 10 pages are in this category, out of 10 total.
This is a list of fictional hackers in comics, films, video games, and other media. Hollywood films of the 1980s and 1990s typically portrayed hackers as "unintentional criminals" who end up becoming heroes, even as they were hunted by law enforcement. [1]
Antivirus company Avast has discovered a new malware named “Crackonosh” that is being hidden in free versions of popular PC games. The malware hijacks your computer to be used in crypto mining.
Dante's Inferno (video game) Darksiders (video game) Darksiders Genesis; Dead or School; Deadpool (video game) Death Jr. Death Jr. II: Root of Evil; Demise: Rise of the Ku'tan; Demon Chaos; Devil May Cry (video game) Devil May Cry 2; Devil May Cry 3: Dante's Awakening; Devil May Cry 4; Devil May Cry 4: Special Edition; Devil May Cry 5; Devil's ...
TeslaTeam is a group of black-hat computer hackers from Serbia established in 2010. TESO was a hacker group originating in Austria that was active primarily from 1998 to 2004. The Unknowns is a group of white-hat hackers that exploited many high-profiled websites and became very active in 2012 when the group was founded and disbanded.
In July 2020, the group released an up to date crack for Monster Hunter World: Iceborne for PC, a game protected by Denuvo Anti-Tamper, a protection widely known for being hard to crack. [8] Paradox had members such as D3stY (d3zxor) and Genius specialized in dongle reverse engineering and patching for hardware dongles such as Rainbow Computer ...