Security engineer ports password cracker hashcat to Gameboy Advance — 16.8 MHz chip can perform a meager 727 hashes a second, 30 million times slower than a modern rig

In the modern age, password cracking is an activity that generally begets quite powerful hardware, usually high-powered GPUs. Hashing algorithms have gotten trickier, and brute-forcing them has become computationally expensive. It’s only natural, then, that a new software project has come up to port the common hashcat cracking utility to the mighty… Gameboy Advance (GBA).

The gba-hashcat software is the brainchild of security engineer solstICE (Ice), to whom the question of “why” is seemingly answered with “why not.” Running on an original GBA, the app can power through SHA256 hashes at 727 h/s. At that rate, the author estimates that one year’s worth of gba-hashcat would be equivalent to one second of a modern GPU-accelerated rig.

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