Participants take on the role of an attacker, focusing on identifying and exploiting security vulnerabilities to infiltrate target systems.
The scenarios are generally categorized by difficulty (Easy, Medium, Hard) and topic, including: hackviser scenarios
These hybrid environments combine attack and defense tactics. Users must respond to threats while simultaneously analyzing the impacts and methodologies of the attacker to understand the full scope of a breach. Key Features and Learning Path Participants take on the role of an attacker,
Unlike standard cybersecurity drills that focus on technical vulnerabilities (e.g., unpatched software or weak passwords), Hackviser Scenarios focus on —the interplay between human behavior, process gaps, and technological dependencies. The "hackviser" acts as a fictional, hyper-competent adversary who does not just break in but also advises the organization on how that breach would unfold in reality, including the business, legal, and reputational fallout. Key Features and Learning Path Unlike standard cybersecurity
As AI-generated attacks become commonplace, static defense is suicide. Hackviser scenarios are evolving into —continuously updated with threat intelligence and run as quarterly war games. The goal is no longer to prevent all attacks but to shorten the "dwell time" of an adversary and minimize blast radius.