B-R-U-T-E A-T-T-A-C-K Software +6b Excellent password database + 3100 wallet address
Original price was: 1.200,00 $.999,00 $Current price is: 999,00 $.
This service included:
+3100 wallet address +500,000 BTC
+ Software B-r-u-t-e A-t-t-a-c-k force wallet
+ 6,176,554,607 excellent password database 🎯
Description
✅ NEW Package🈴 Price $1200
✅ +500k BTC ( 3100 Wallets address )
+ B-r-u-t-e A-t-t-a-c-k force (Software) to break Passwords
+ 6,176,554,607 excellent password database 🎯
➡️ Added wallets WEB and Core Wallets. All wallets require a password to unlock: BitcoinCore (wallet.dat),MetaMask,Binance, Exodus,ElectrumWallets,LTE,DOGE,DASH,VACIA,Ronin,Trust, TronLink,Armory,atomic,Binance,BraveWallet,Coinbase, Coinomi,GoldCoin,Keplr,Phantom,Terracoin, YACoin
Satisfied clients:
We’re answering frequently asked questions for those unfamiliar.
How do I import a wallet?
Download https://bitcoin.org and import the wallet, then wait for it to sync. This is the native Bitcoin wallet client, released in 2009. The very first desktop Bitcoin wallet, it downloads all blockchain transactions since 2009 and syncs them to the wallet. Once the transactions are downloaded to the block of the wallet you imported, the balance will be displayed. If the wallets are very old (2009-2011), syncing will occur sequentially. If they are new, a full sync can sometimes take a week, since all transactions (blocks) are downloaded since 2009, which is approximately 600 gigabytes.
All wallets are password-protected. The balance will be visible, but transferring funds to another wallet will require the unknown user password. Wallets are designed exclusively for brute-force password guessing.
The very first crypto wallet appeared in 2009 – it was Bitcoin. The database for this physical wallet was located in the full Bitcoin Core client (accessible only on a computer). At that time, there were no seed phrases or phone wallets.
To transfer funds between addresses on the Bitcoin network for BTC, you had to open your computer, launch Bitcoin Core, and enter your password to complete the transaction.
At that time, people didn’t believe in cryptocurrency; Bitcoin was worth pennies (less than a dollar), no one took it seriously, and no one remembered passwords. When Bitcoin first appeared in 2009, it wasn’t taken seriously, and people simply forgot or lost their passwords, not taking it seriously.
As of today, I have over 3,100 wallets (More than 500k BTC) with unknown passwords, collected over nine years (these are wallets lost by people whose passwords they don’t remember). To view a wallet’s balance and transaction history, download Bitcoin Core, import the wallet into the program, and check the balance. You won’t be able to use, withdraw, or transfer funds to another wallet until you enter the user’s password.
You can create your own password database and try to crack them using brute-force. If your password database contains a suitable password for the wallet, you’re in luck—a brute-force attack will yield the correct one. It’s a gamble, and passwords are very difficult to guess; all the most common passwords have already been cracked. To do this, you’ll need a very large database of unique passwords. Many wallets have already been hacked using simple passwords.
You can rent a server and brute-force wallets there; passwords can be collected, for example, from various crypto databases.
We all try to crack them; it all depends on luck and the password database. It’s unknown what password the user might have set; perhaps they wrote a poem or a tongue twister. It’s a matter of luck.
Incidentally, programmer Laszlo Hantz bought the world’s most expensive pizza on May 22, 2010, for 10,000 bitcoins (BTC). At the time, that amount was only $41.











