terça-feira, 14 de abril de 2020

Ransomware.OSX.KeRanger Samples


Research: New OS X Ransomware KeRanger Infected Transmission BitTorrent Client Installer by Claud Xiao

Sample credit: Claud Xiao


File information

d1ac55a4e610380f0ab239fcc1c5f5a42722e8ee1554cba8074bbae4a5f6dbe1 
1d6297e2427f1d00a5b355d6d50809cb 
Transmission-2.90.dmg

e3ad733cea9eba29e86610050c1a15592e6c77820927b9edeb77310975393574 
56b1d956112b0b7bd3e44f20cf1f2c19 
Transmission

31b6adb633cff2a0f34cefd2a218097f3a9a8176c9363cc70fe41fe02af810b9
14a4df1df622562b3bf5bc9a94e6a783 
General.rtf

d7d765b1ddd235a57a2d13bd065f293a7469594c7e13ea7700e55501206a09b5 
24a8f01cfdc4228b4fc9bb87fedf6eb7 
Transmission2.90.dmg

ddc3dbee2a8ea9d8ed93f0843400653a89350612f2914868485476a847c6484a
3151d9a085d14508fa9f10d48afc7016 
Transmission

6061a554f5997a43c91f49f8aaf40c80a3f547fc6187bee57cd5573641fcf153 
861c3da2bbce6c09eda2709c8994f34c 
General.rtf



Download

More info


Wireless Scenarios Part 1: EAP-Radius JTR Hashcat, SSID MAC Issues And More

Intro: 
I have been on a number of wireless engagements again lately and much like the wireless blog i wrote over a year ago i am trying various combinations of techniques and tools in conjunction to gain access to networks. I will show a range of tools and techniques mostly as a reminder to myself. The format will be scenario based on what i have been seeing while testing.  Some of these tools include JTR/Hashcat with specialized rulesets, mdk3 for SSID/MAC bruteforcing, evil access points for bypassing guest networks, DNS redirection/tunneling as well as radius-wpe attacks etc... This will be a 2 part blog, first blog being more Pre-Auth attacks and the second blog being more client attacks.



Finding Hidden SSID's and Limited user network attacks:
Recently i have been on a lot of tests where administrators think its a wonderful idea to hide their SSID's. Administrators feel that if they hide their SSID's they are magically secure. While Cloaked SSID's may pose a slight problem it's not a security feature. Especially when hiding WEP encrypted networks. One issue that keeps coming up is hidden networks with NO clients thus no probe request/response traffic available to passively capture an SSID. Without clients you can't de-authenticate and force reconnections requests with SSID's. To top that off administrators are also running another trivial security feature known as MAC filtering. While MAC filtering is also easy to bypass, again there are no clients on the network so we must come up with strategies to figure out both the SSID's and the possible client MAC addresses. Lets start by addressing the SSID issue.
SSID's can generally be seen in the Beacon traffic. However, if MAC cloaking or hidden SSID's are enabled on your access point they are stripped from the beacon traffic. Striping the beacons of SSID's is usually not a problem if there are clients looking to join the network. As the SSID's must be sent in probe traffic to successfully inquire about joining the network, and SSID's are than easily obtained. Thus why tools like kismet can passively discover the correct SSID given a bit of time and a few clients probing for the hidden network. But, what happens if there is no client traffic?
So the actual scenario i was presented with recently was a Cloaked SSID on a limited use network running WEP, which had a MAC filtered client device. This device would attach to the network once a day for a limited amount of time. So the first piece of the puzzle would be figuring out the SSID for later use then tackling the rest of the problem.

We start with a nice little tool called MDK3 which can be used to send out mass SSID requests in either dictionary style or bruteforce in order to determine an SSID. Lets start with the simple syntax then get into some more fine tuned strategies for determining SSID's based on the mind of the sysadmin.

There are 2 modes i have been using, one is dictionary mode and the other bruteforce mode, i would always start with dictionary because its faster. If a dictionary gives no resultes then move to bruteforce techniques. Also have your Airodump-ng/Kismet running during the attack and if the SSID is found it should apear in there as well as your MDK3 results window. You can get your target BSSID value from airodump along with useful information sometimes regarding length of a hidden SSID value which can be used in fine tuning bruteforcing. MDK3 will automatically pick the correct length and then begin bruteforcing based on that length value:

Below is an example of SSID Length Output: 
CH 6 ][ Elapsed: 8 s ][ 2012-03-01 21:08
BSSID PWR Beacons #Data, #/s CH MB ENC CIPHER AUTH ESSID

00:24:A5:6F:2E:D5 -59 5 0 0 5 54 WEP WEP length: 12
00:1A:A1:05:E8:20 -61 2 0 0 3 48 . WEP WEP length: 1
00:24:A5:6F:37:9F -64 2 0 0 5 54 WEP WEP length: 12

You will notice example output above says that one SSID is of length 12 and another is of length 1, these are the SSID perceived length values based on values in the packet capture. Not always accurate because these values are just Null place holder values and not always set accurately. Essentially one SSID packet above has a one null value while the other packet has 12 null values as placeholders. If a length of 1 is present you may have to start at 1 and go through the whole range of brute forcing. If the length is known then you can start and end at 12 in this case shortening the full bruteforce time considerably.

Attack Modes and Info:
Dictionary Mode:
./mdk3 [Interface] p -c 1 -t [BSSID] -f [dictionary] -s 100

Bruteforce mode:
./mdk3 [Interface] p -c 1 -t [BSSID] -b u -s 100

Above Switch mappings are defined as the following:
b = bruteforce also can add a character set b [charset]
s = packet speed
c = channel
f = ssid dictionary file

I first tried a regular dictionary attack of common words:
ficti0n:# mdk3 mon0 p -c 1 -t 00:01:55:B1:A3:A5 -f english.txt
channel set to: 1
SSID Wordlist Mode activated!
Waiting for beacon frame from target...
Sniffer thread started
Found SSID length 1, usually a placeholder, no information about real SSIDs length available.
Trying SSID:
Packets sent: 1 - Speed: 1 packets/sec
Got response from 03:F0:9F:17:08:32, SSID: "Secure_Access"
Last try was: (null)
Trying SSID: beauty
Packets sent: 167 - Speed: 166 packets/sec
Got response from 03:F0:9F:17:08:33, SSID: "Guest_Access"
Last try was: (null)
Trying SSID: bianca
Trying SSID: winnie
Trying SSID: isabella
Trying SSID: sierra
Trying SSID: 00000000
Trying SSID: dancer1
Packets sent: 32507 - Speed: 376 packets/sec
Got response from 00:3B:10:47:33:32, SSID: "wow"

I began with a dictionary against a network address i got from my initial airodump-ng. On my first MDK3 run i found one new access point named "wow" but i didnt find the target AP's SSID. If you look at the above MDK3 output there are 2 other networks with similar formats which may reflect our target networks format. Below you will see a similar format.
  • Guest_Access
  • Secure_Access
Creating a Custom dictionary based on observations:
If the target company has a repeating SSID format we can create our own dictionary file. According to the above output the format is [Word]_Access, we can take advantage of this by creating a new list with python using the company format. Break open your python editor and create a quick script to parse the english dictionary in the proper format for our attack by uppercasing every dictionary word and appending the word "Access".

#--------------------------------------------------------------
#!/usr/bin/python

dictionary = open("rockyou-75.txt", "r")
SSID_List = open("SSID_List.txt", "a")


for word in dictionary:
word = str.capitalize(word) + "Access"
SSID_List.write(word)


SSID_List.close()
dictionary.close()

#----------------------------------------------------------------

I then ran MDK3 again with my modified list. When this was done I then was able to get a response from MDK3 and determine the SSID of the target network, shown below.

Got response from 00:01:55:B1:A3:A5, SSID: "Secret_Access"


Luckily i didn't have to resort to a true bruteforce attack although the format is shown above for completeness. 



MDK3 MAC address Bruteforce:
The next issue is that of determining a valid MAC address on a network without any known clients, this can also be done with MDK3 and bruteforce mode.  I would suggest looking at other client MAC addresses on the guest or corporate networks as a starting point. Then use those vendor startpoints as your bruteforce values. So if for example you know a bit about the company based on other network MAC values you can use this knowledge in your brute forcing with the -f switch. Below is a basic command ouput for bruteforcing MAC address filters.


ficti0n:# mdk3 mon0 f -t

Trying MAC 00:00:22:00:00:00 with 100.0000 ms timeout at 0 MACs per second and 0 retries
Trying MAC 00:00:22:00:00:00 with 100.0000 ms timeout at 0 MACs per second and 1 retries
Packets sent: 2 - Speed: 1 packets/sec

Found a valid MAC adress: 00:00:22:00:00:00
Have a nice day! :)

Mdk3 -fullhelp output:
--------------------------------------------------------------

MAC filter bruteforce mode
This test uses a list of known client MAC Adresses and tries to
authenticate them to the given AP while dynamically changing
its response timeout for best performance. It currently works only
on APs who deny an open authentication request properly
-t
Target BSSID
-m
Set the MAC adress range to use (3 bytes, i.e. 00:12:34)
Without -m, the internal database will be used
-f
Set the MAC adress to begin bruteforcing with
(Note: You can't use -f and -m at the same time)
---------------------------------------------------------------------

I wasn't aware of the above technique at the time of testing but i did give it a try on a local Access Point and found a useable mac address under contrived scenarios. So this was worth noting as I found almost zero mention of it when searching around. Also note that some access points do not properly handle the authentication scenarios in which case the above technique will not work correctly. Usually the user sends an auth request and then the AP sends an auth response denoting success or failure along with an error code, but MAC filering is not part of the normal standard so results will vary regarding error codes. This is AP functionality independent. When it does work it gives you a little smily face and says it found a useable MAC address [SHOWN ABOVE] . Unfortunately in my penetration test I was stuck waiting for a client to come online to get a useable MAC address. Below are a few ideas for the rest of the scenario.


Depending on the location and use of the limited connectivity device there are a few options available for retrieving the WEP key. Networks with hidden SSID's have clients who are always probing for hidden networks whether onsite or remote. You could attack a client directly via a Cafe Latte attack. A Caffe Latte attack woud attack a client with a fake access point and gratuitas ARP requests to discover the WEP key of "Secret_Access" by flooding the client with ARP requests it responds to, generating enough traffic to derive the WEP key. This technique is useful now that you know the SSID, especially if the device is being used at the local coffee shop. I will take a look at this attack in the next blog when focusing on client based attacks.

Caffe Latte was not a good option for me because the device appears online for a short period of time and might not be available either offsite at a coffee shop or even locally long enough to generate enough traffic to crack the network. In this test I however didn't have enough time to see client actually get online but had I see the client get online I would have noted his MAC address and then configured a chop chop or fragmentation attack against the network whether the client was available or not all i would really need is one data packet. I will not illustrate this whole technique as it is fully covered in the following link Cracking WEP with no Clients.


Cracking Radius /PEAP/TTLS Hashes: (Post EAP Attack)
This is about attacking hashes from WPE Radius attacks, but just as a reference before we start here is a quick radius attack setup guide without going into to much detail.


Steps to Setup WPE attack
  1. Install the following freeradius server and WPE patch. http://blog.opensecurityresearch.com/2011/09/freeradius-wpe-updated.html
  2. Start your WPE server by typing 'radiusd'
  3. Tail your log file so you can see incoming credentials 'tail -f /usr/local/var/log/radius/freeradius-server-wpe.log
  4. Setup an access point with similar settings as to what you are seeing in airodump or wireshark essentially this will be a WPA Enterprise with AES and a default secret of 'test' which is set in the WPE installed package by default so it can talk between the AP and the radius server. You will also need to run an ifconfig on your radius server box so you know what address to point the AP too.
  5. Optionally you can use hostAP instead of a physical enterprise AP setup.

Use one of your local computers to connect to the FreeRadius wireless network and type in a fake username/password to grab an example hash. If you dont see your hash output in the logfile then double check all your ip addresses and insure your server is running. In a real attack you would wait for clients to attach to your Access point and the credentials will be forwarded to your FreeRadius-WPE server. Once this is done the fun begins and also where we will start in our attack scenario.

Formatting hashes:
Your hashes can come in a few formats, they might come back as PAP responses in which case they will be plain text passwords. Plaintext PAP can sometimes be a result of mobile devices sending paswords. Otherwise your attack will result in MSChap password challenge/response hashes. Once you receive your MSChap hashes they have to be formated in a specific way in order to crack them. Here is an example hash and the proper format to use before trying to crack the hashes.

Example Hash:
mschap: Mon Feb 05 19:35:59 2012
username: test
challenge: b3:f8:48:e9:db:02:22:83
response: 15:36:d7:e9:da:43:1f:5f:d2:4b:51:53:87:89:63:b7:12:26:7c:a8:f7:ea:9c:26

Formated for john:(username::::response:challenge)
test::::1536d7e9da431f5fd24b5153878963b712267ca8f7ea9c26:b3f848e9db022283

Tool to automate this: (Tool Link)
One of my friends wrote a python script that will take your freeradius-server-wpe.log as input and format out all of the hashes one per line.. The script output can be fed directly into John The Ripper(JTR).

JTR Cracking and Custom Rulesets:
One way to crack these hashes is to use JTR with a bunch of dictionary attacks and if that fails procede from there with custom korelogic rulesets. Check out preceding link for more info on password cracking techniques which can be employed in addition to this blog. Below I will reiterate a few points on setting up JTR with custom rulesets from the Defcon challenge in 2010 based on the previous link and then how to parse them out and use them.

The first thing to note is that the format of the hashes you get from WPE will generally be considered NETNTLM within JTR so we will have to specify that as well as the wordlists we would like to use to start.

Dictionary attacking first:
First go into your JTR directory and try to crack with some dictionaries of your choosing:
ficti0n:# cd Desktop/Tools\ /john/run
ficti0n:# ./john --wordlist=wordlists/wpa.txt --format=NETNTLM JohnFormat.txt

Loaded 1 password hash (NTLMv1 C/R MD4 DES [netntlm])
test             (test)
guesses: 1  time: 0:00:00:00 100.00% (ETA: Tue Mar 20 19:29:31 2012)  c/s: 692441  trying: test

Custom Rules: korelogic rulesets (Link)
If the cracking fails on all of your wordlists then try installing custom rulesets with the following sequence of commands meant do download and then append the rules to the current john file. The following command can also be found at the above Korelogic link.
ficti0n:# wget http://contest-2010.korelogic.com/rules.txt
ficti0n:# cat rules.txt >> john.conf


Once this is done you can directly specify any rule in the file similar to the following:
ficti0n:# ./john --wordlist=wordlists/english.txt --format=NETNTLM --rules:KoreLogicRulesAppendNum_AddSpecialEverywhere johnFormat.txt


Or if you are time independent just let them all rip and go on vacation and check the results when you get back LOL
ficti0n:# for ruleset in `grep KoreLogicRules john.conf | cut -d: -f 2 | cut -d\] -f 1`; do ./john --wordlist=wordlists/english.txt --format=NETNTLM --rules:${ruleset} JohnFormat.txt; done


Hashcat rulesets and building pasword files:
Another way to build complex password files is to use tools like HashCat with supplied password rules and pipe it out to STDOut, either into a file or the STDIn of other cracking programs like John the Ripper. There is a rules folder in HashCat which has a number of rules provided by default.


Available Hashcat Rules:
ficti0n:# ls
best64.rule      generated.rule   passwordspro.rule  T0XlC.rule     toggles3.rule
combinator.rule  leetspeak.rule   perfect.rule       toggles1.rule  toggles4.rule
d3ad0ne.rule     oscommerce.rule  specific.rule      toggles2.rule  toggles5.rule

Creating Passwords with Hashcat and a dictionary:
ficti0n:# ./hashcat-cli32.bin -r rules/passwordspro.rule ../wordlists/cain.txt --stdout

You can also pipe passwords directly into JTR from hashcat output but its really slow so I suggest you make a world list then load it up with --wordlist, but the example is shown below.

Piping Hashcat password rules into JTR: (really slow)
ficti0n:# ./hashcat-cli32.bin -r rules/passwordspro.rule ../wordlists/rockyou-75.txt --stdout |/pentest/passwords/john/john --format=NETNTLM JohnFormat.txt --stdin


I hope someone finds my above notes useful, I am going to write up some client side attack stuff as well and post it up here... Let me know if you have any questions or need more clarification on anything covered in the blogs. 

Read more
  1. Hack Tool Apk
  2. Hacking App
  3. Computer Hacker
  4. Hack Apps
  5. Hack Tool Apk No Root
  6. Pentest Tools Github
  7. Hacker Tools 2020
  8. Hacker Tools 2019
  9. Usb Pentest Tools
  10. Hacking Tools For Kali Linux
  11. Hacks And Tools
  12. Best Pentesting Tools 2018
  13. Blackhat Hacker Tools
  14. Tools For Hacker
  15. Hack Apps
  16. Hacker Tools Linux
  17. Hacker Tools Free Download

IoT-Implant-Toolkit: A Framework For Implantation Attack Of IoT Devices


About IoT-Implant-Toolkit
   IoT-Implant-Toolkit is a framework of useful tools for malware implantation research of IoT devices. It is a toolkit consisted of essential software tools on firmware modification, serial port debugging, software analysis and stable spy clients. With an easy-to-use and extensible shell-like environment, IoT-Implant-Toolkit is a one-stop-shop toolkit simplifies complex procedure of IoT malware implantation.

   In MarvelTeamLab's research, they have succcessfully implanted Trojans in eight devices including smart speakers, cameras, driving recorders and mobile translators with IoT-Implant-Toolkit.

    A demo GIF below:

IoT-Implant-Toolkit's Installation
   Your must install ffmpeg and sox first:
  • For Debian-based distro users: sudo apt install sox ffmpeg
  • For Arch Linux-based user: sudo pacman -S sox ffmpeg

   Then, open your Terminal and enter these commands:

Usage
   Three commands supported:
  • list: list all plugins.
  • run: run a specific plugin with "run [plugin] [parameters]".
  • exit: to exit.

You might like these similar tools:
More information

Masad Clipper And Stealer - Windows Spyware Exfiltrating Data Via Telegram (Samples)



Reference




"Masad Clipper and Stealer" steals browser information, computer files,  and automatically replaces cryptocurrency wallets from the clipboard with its own.
It is written using Autoit scripts and then compiled into a Windows executable.
It uses Telegram to exfiltrate stolen information.





Download

             Other malware






Hashes

SHA256SHA1MD5
1acf5a461ee16336eb8bbf8d29982c7e26d5e11827c58ca01adac671a28b52ad6001b34c17c122d201613fffd846b056614b66dae03234c2259c474aeb69500423ddeed7
290a1b89517dec10bfd9938a0e86ae8c53b0c78ed7c60dc99e4f8e5837f4f24a32800c10588053813f55bf8c87771311c5f7f38e2df4c1cf093c8373a8f2f194e77b69a2
7937a1068f130a90b44781eea3351ba8a2776d0fede9699ba8b32f3198de045ba2a67b06344e4f1cf85086f6b584316ec53d5e548368f1c4d8f0d908f5f4ff671df5f1da
87e44bca3cc360c64cc7449ec1dc26b7d1708441d471bf3d36cd330db35762942fe5483e6b82220eeeef12e531eb3347fea16ac11082ce517dd23eee335bedfc6bcd8205
cf97d52551a96dacb089ac41463d21cab2b004ba8c38ffc6cb5fb0958ddd34db5b79a15cb61f5260f0b9d807faa160e6d49590e4b5fdf9653eb1ffbdae8cb4f1f2d71747
79aa23c5a25c7cdbaba9c6c655c918dac3d9823ac62ebed9d7d3e94e1eaafc074a279a6b82fe801d3c8be9d16df2ef5623b177040029ab0fd56cd7e493b46a331ef18bd3
03d703f6d341be258ac3d95961ff0a67d4bf792f9e896530e193b091dca29c2ea9740352af2c9cc926deba7dffc452f213f7f05fa462aac76def5b53351b3b1ddb41124c
a368b6755e62e5c0ff79ea1e3bd146ee8a349af309b4acf0558a9c667e78293ae16167ab646381c277c2ca84319ceb57bacb2c92c4cdc7665adb1cda5897d4df4a560f88
ba933cefbe9a8034f0ba34e7d18481a7db7451c8ef4b6172fb0cad6db0513a5100749407e97085af470c75ef004f2235d30af44fc26a3f2317507a09d91014469b045384
3ba3c528d11d1df62a969a282e9e54534fb3845962672ad6d8bbc29cb6d062f5b8100890c0f1894544b3f99168377ec46c38e9114a0607b4488cd539b8b0b443abd121e3
b763054180cd4e24c0a78b49055ad36dbc849f1a096cddf2db8cee0b9338c21d7bec99308ce4bf409417b642cd9432000a5c19d22dfb1d606e5539399aa1a536baafd2f8
d5ce4b04b7eec6530a4a9d40510177468fadc235253e5a74530a8c9d990f3c5027fc204ffa42262b7570b6fccb435d4d38a3610fc5d8b73da810646407c333fe52186281
965a5949d8f94e17ebcd4cb6d0a7c19f49facbfc1b1c74111e5ceb83550d6c8f7698584b2e7c62061447a6a2583ed6957180c205e7ebe4411664672359b393f530fc2fc1
44134b9d4b10d94f6381b446a1728b116d62e65c1a52db45235af12caf7e38c0fd114077927d501606575ba9ab38ecfb3407d432a4388980d7e3539d74a950dab23d00ac
848d76a227f4fe282b7ddfd82a6dfc4c25da2735a684462b42fe4e1c413d8e34135cee7610890497183eb6251efef307ea013fe17bb23077b4f80df48b91b425eda05828
5ca0a957fe6c253827f344da4ba8692d77a4e21a1df4251594be2d27d87dd8aed231874332ca462fb462e4f68450d2c2c22d4bcddda77b3f3f74a2bdffd167917686e139
016fa511f6546ed439d2606c6db8821685a99f5a14ef3f710668b58dc89c69265c83749c62ee0131710bf26931cb1e463a8fbda3b0c34df85677d8f752dc1e1a5eeba0c9
22be594fbfa878f631c0632f6c4d260b00918817ff66a1f9f15efe44c1a58460856d635fca52631305f1fefc58eafa74496524b660ebf41953d5c6e212fc306cdb0c6519
f3571ec66288405dab43332ca03812617f85fb08832fbbe1f1d89901fe034b8a819485e20d841195e2e8a7ae5b41ff709887bb216984d37863c08b9fdd969297d35d3538
04c949eca23103b1de05278b49f42c3ab6b06f4bf20aafa5f2faefaa84c16ecd0487db2df1802dd4ee4ae3b62b5f08937dd5c77c4366ee61cbd7e636aea8540836a60036
d6fc04acda8f33a6d35eb577c27754c2f2b4d6f4869576c7c4e11b2c5e9b017683ae89826114662dad8553d5eeed5217b57047f22bc964e294d7ab314c34e5934d91a5a9
18c0bd4dd98008383fc52045ad896449fa7f0037593bb730ed1ef88aa547006dbcaa05b60a9d625852ac4f2d0d805ab16498815535d9f08c39c4cf396427f3a345e5c09a
4c9d5469e9095813418260045c2b11e499e4eaa0ffb25293f90f580c464157df4c6aacc0b893ed366f9f307326e59efa61e5153450dddaf7e5bb24aabf66eecd0c8b79cf
0b5f1fbc05dc8baca492b748adeb01fb4904e02723b59211ecde222f7b12d91e87f898e0d41c0f2c22d4e9278a942326877fc368da780b72140535d4c2d391e76dc8181d
31ad5c4547ceae4d0550c8460524c16a6105afc056760e872c4966656256c9dc37f485d3fa8f6cf13061cb1ea38ae0d5d2edfd95134aefcf640c24a1ab5344a96150fb05
edb00a0e5ff70e899857549e3263c887a799416c8bbab43ab130ca1be9bbd78c42c30dc551a3cb3bc935c0eae79b79f17942e439c2722241f765d2ad4fb58edd76a4adea
96f852b81760a425befaa11ea37c0cdea2622630bf2a0c94bb95042211ab614d5d9782064bc38d40c88f32c0410479cbd61caa40f332cfcda8c0ef579ede59eff23caa1e
57fd171a5b1a88e9583b42439851a91a940eb31105ab29cb314846da2ed43b820bfec2059823b936d782bea7bc16abd9923dddb56fff82df7a565b4570d299486697310f
277018b2cc6226dca6c7678cac6718c8584f7231340ad8cd7c03477559fdf48b261f916ce97ffc6817a4772705df68e6ccca8181009dc7d8766a85d85bb6a26ee69b66fe
e968affb1fc7756deb0e29807a06681d09a0425990be76b31816795875469e3dcf78484a999183324da9affdf2aaeff508d1dc473e1b8f6313447b8a4b49671ddeb8a4ee
4b1ccf6b823ee82e400ba25b1f532cd369d7e536475a470e2011b77ffeaf7bb3bc988f7cd32d411f2a9888afc72c7a892e2a1def55128a3da6f70129acdbf9dbe955cfe7
fc84d6636a34ad1a11dbaa1daec179e426bdcd9887b3d26dc06b202417c08f951df31bec02e35c9a4656bb3a3bdf631bb37605a855d77ab16377a8a314982f723fcc6fae
9ca15f15fbae58cb97b0d48a0248461e78e34e6d530338e3e5b91f209a1662678505dfaad6d10b84c73544eb748d547cb5bad9bdebc12c530dab0a65c37ffd72612fa705
31f3a402c1662ed6adffbf2b1b65cf902d1df763698eb76d21e4e94b4c62971418c972722d984ff6da2bc26a0aca4c7f209cc39c05bbf6e72b5b24c0c81e0671bf17b1e7
8d9f124ddd69c257189f1e814bb9e3731c00926fc2371e6ebe2654f3950ca02e553cd98c83e945ee3013aa40897baec0305b34a2b4030025e039c54c2d3923057447494c
a0923d7645604faaa864a079adeb741a5d6e65507a2819b2fee4835d396077d9f8e6995e28c789d8b24e982ac53d5d6ba453de73b796f85c8a7de71407d6e3c4206edda3
a19b790ea12f785256510dde367d3313b5267536a58ca0c27dbdac7c693f57e1a92f7393daf7ead9a44b12e35f850705798fc879a6defec886d31f6375712466dd794a96
f030fb4e859ee6a97c50c973a73dced3640befe37f579cfd15367ce6a9bbede2ad3a1e779f02539ccd07bff735e0823add9730b2c259564a8fe72333604a5686e30f6242
f01db6d77ac21211992ceae4e66e1e03c1cb39d61e03645b9369f28252ca769314c6bf63ff4d32d8a0a42e81ea39304fb7ab13c880fe593ef5538fbf66b3b3e1cb7b9b8b
dfe3d0e95feaed685a784aed14d087b019ba2eb0274947a840d2bdbae4ae36742107d057478328df8f538102508de00b0c4b37c7b5a85a0e7a2c4197c3794c8bb2eb5763
bf6083040ca51e83415f27c9412d9e3d700bd0841493b207bc96abf944ab0ca709a695ce6c35c029dd7577e29f403d7144698b417a2edceb31a9c0d05e5f13c6caee0576
b154151dc8ace5c57f109e6bb211a019db20c4f0127c4d13c7703f730bf492768c0cda049c85493df4e97db3db4ddc94075ba62cb6a895ac5ba5b6472680d47410a238a5
6bf6b1bde63cee9b81902efd187fdd56ecee5853754ce0a19d5ab5c3b02429886e2d4f0bcc97ce130ae89647f648d3e96548a391a29f9d176b913e7f693355700aaadbb9
0dcf547bd8f4074af97416d8b84ea64b2f3319064aa4bce64ad0c2e2d3957175a996b925e9391a69140caf6e4adba928694ffe66dd575413a40839f2807593aa21c71152
6cff1249cc45b61ce8d28d87f8edc6616447e38168e610bed142f0b9c46ea6849baa823deb9075e8df77b891115c019244de09de488bb5c0739485721182c01a82b01d14
5b5ebe019806885bbaafe37bc10ca09549e41c240b793fd29a70690a5d80b4963d46711f9064b96ff2d0affdef1ecd82d120659db95e2d8a8509ac05f5445d18d32cc7cb
103d87098c9702cab7454b52869aeeb6a22919f29a7f19be7509255ce2d8c83ee29a163488438c9ea9014ddf1a9b2d382cc5d7e6baf2587fafaedbab4a78b9b7fd8b55f8
c73675005a09008bc91d6bc3b5ad59a630ab4670dca6ac0d926165a3ecfd8d92d8ea2280cd06a5cc32b7d668e2b4b2e68f3a7e2a98ecc6fbb2cb5649daf751fcbfb81bcb
ef623aadd50330342dc464a31b843b3d8b5767d62a62f5e515ac2b380b208fbe620ff5a7aaf7f3fcf4abc9365e0e77b3ec4b434db14535c5835c9dfb3cbbc7f6fef6034c
Related word

sábado, 11 de abril de 2020

Buds, Blooms, And Thorns Review Of Triassic Terror By Eagle-Gryphon Games

Buds, Blooms, and Thorns Review of Triassic Terror by Eagle-Gryphon Games
DisclaimerSupport me on Patreon!
Vitals:
Title: Triassic Terror
Designed by: Peter Hawes
Publisher: Eagle-Gryphon Games
Year Published: 2013
MSRP: $75
2-6p | 90-120 min | 14+

Introduction:
Triassic Terror is an exciting tactical game for 2 to 6 players. Starting with just one herd in the steamy Triassic Swamp, players must make wise choices to grow new herds and guide their migration across the four pre-historic landscapes.

This Primeval world is full of danger, with the mighty T-Rex, marauding Velociraptors and swooping Pterodactyls looking to reduce the size of your herds. Jurassic and Cretaceous Volcanoes fill this violent world with ash and dust and devastate the terrain.

The player best managing his herds and dominating not only local habitats, but entire environments, will win this challenging game.

~Triassic Terror is the winner of GAMES Magazine's Best New Strategy Game Award~

- Description from publisher.

Blooms:
Blooms are the game's highlights and features.  Elements that are exceptional.
  • Very interesting area control mechanics.  The methods of distributing your dinos across the board and controlling areas based on the size of your herd present unique strategic situations.
  • Amazing components!  You get to play with plastic dinosaur miniatures!  Like the toys you probably had as a kid (or maybe like the ones your kids currently have)!
Buds:
Buds are interesting parts of the game I would like to explore more. 
  • This is a brutal game, with a ton of destructive player interaction.  You really have to be in the mood for a game with a lot of carnage, but that destruction drives some tight strategy and is pretty evenly dished out.
  • The game has a very different feel at different player counts - fewer players is less brutal and offers more opportunities for strategic growth, while more players really has you running a tight ship with very little wiggle room strategically.
Thorns:
Thorns are a game's shortcomings and any issues I feel are noteworthy.
  • Not a game for everyone.  There is a TON of take-that in this game, although it's so widespread that no one ever feels singled out.  The carnage is everywhere!
  • The sweet spot is 3-4 players.  There are 6 possible actions each turn, including four of which mess with other players' herds, and three that cause predators to remove opponents' dinosaurs from the board.  With 6 players every destructive action is taken every turn; with 3-4 players there are periods of calm between the predator attacks so you can build up herd sizes.
Final Thoughts:
As you may have come to expect from Eagle-Gryphon Games, the component quality is absolutely stellar.  Everything from the box to the insert (with its plastic cover to keep everything nice and neat) to the wooden dinosaur tokens, to the amazing plastic dinosaur models, and everything else is top notch quality.  This game is amazing just for the table presence alone.  My only complaint is that the graphic design on the reference tiles is very busy and can be confusing.  But once you know the possible actions, the reference becomes just a reference and is easy enough to use.

The actual gameplay is a little more subjective though.  My game group is mostly gamers who like deeper strategy games.  Some come from a more Amerithrash background (especially wargames like Axis & Allies, Risk, and some of the classic Avalon Hill titles) and some are really into more Euro-style games with less chaotic strategy.  Triassic Terror appealed to both groups, but didn't seem to be an instant hit.  Everyone enjoyed playing, and felt the brutality of the t-rex, raptors, and pterodactyl were amazingly thematic, however, this brutality was also a major source of frustration among both camps.  Everyone felt it was very difficult to create any long-term strategy because dinosaurs were removed from the board almost as fast as you could add them.

This was especially prevalent in the six-player game where raptors and the t-rex actions were used every single round.  You start the game with 4 dinosaurs and in our six-player game, after six rounds of play, our herds numbered 7-12 dinosaurs.  Our herds fared better in the four-player game, ending with 12-25 dinosaurs in our herds, but the predators were still brutal and often derailed any attempt at strategic planning.  Triassic Terror is mostly a tactical game.  You can only plan slightly and instead have to react to the situation you find your herds in each turn.

Triassic Terror falls just short of a Bloom rating, leaving it as a Bud, mostly because the game wasn't quite right for my group.  We liked the area control aspects of the game, felt it was very thematic (maybe too much so), but didn't like the frustration of the destructive mechanics.  For a dudes-on-a-map (or rather dinos-on-a-map) game, this has amazing table presence.  People will definitely stop to check it out and it's a ton of fun to play with dinosaurs.  YOU GET TO PLAY WITH DINOS!!!  But in a world where games like Kemet exist, Triassic Terror falls just a little bit short.  Kemet also has amazing table presence, great area control mechanics, and interesting combat elements (plus, you can ride a dung beetle!), but lacks the brutality and outright devastation that Triassic Terror brings to the table.

If you like area control games and/or dinosaurs though, I definitely recommend giving Triassic Terror a try if you have the chance.  It just barely missed the cut for me, but you may love it.  I'm definitely keeping my copy around for a while because I have a friend that I think will love it, and I'm sure my sons will enjoy it, too.  So while I'd rather play Kemet, there's definitely a time and place for Triassic Terror.

Buds, Blooms, and Thorns Rating:
Bud!  This game definitely has some
great moments.  It's good for several plays
and should appeal to most gamers, especially
if you enjoy other games like this.

Pictures:



















Did you like this review?  Show your support: Support me on Patreon!Also, click the heart at Board Game Links , like GJJ Games on Facebook , or follow on Twitter .  And be sure to check out my games on  Tabletop Generation.


GJJ Games Reviews are independent, unpaid reviews of games I, George Jaros, have played with my family and friends.  Some of these games I own, some are owned by friends, some are borrowed, and some were provided by a publisher or designer for my honest feedback and evaluation.  I make every attempt to be both honest and constructively critical in my reviews, and they are all my opinions.  There are four types of reviews on GJJ Games: Full Reviews feature critical reviews based on a rubric and games receive a rating from 0 to 100.  Quick Reviews and Kickstarter Previews are either shorter reviews of published games or detailed preview reviews of crowdfunding games that will receive a rating from 0 to 10 based on my impressions of the game.  Buds, Blooms,and Thorns reviews are shorter reviews of either published or upcoming games that highlight three aspects of a game: Buds are parts of a game I look forward to exploring more, Blooms are outstanding features of a game, and Thorns are shortcomings of a game.  Each BBT review game will receive an overall rating of Thorn, Bud, or Bloom.

quarta-feira, 8 de abril de 2020

Board Game Support Group


Carl: Hello everyone, please welcome Gary to the group. He could use our support.

Group: Hi Gary!

Gary: Like all of you, I buy too many board games. They're sitting in shrink wrap on shelves.

Group: Nodding approval.

Gary: But I'm mostly trying to sell them to you folks, as a retailer.

Group: Disapproving grumbling.

Gary: But often at a discount, because they sell like crap.

Group: Murmuring with approval.

Gary: You see, as someone whose mostly a role player, I tend to buy board games that interest me. Really complex stuff that makes my brain tingle. But I don't play them. As my friend Jay says, a good day board gaming is still not as good as a bad day role playing. You know, like the sex and pizza metaphor.

Group: Angry grumbling. Several female hands go up.

Vijay: They can't all sell badly, what about Terraforming Mars with its eight point four on bee gee gee?

Gary: Yes, Vijay, even Terraforming Mars with its eight point four. Where did you buy your copy Vijay?

Vijay? (Sheepish) Amazon.

Gary: Yes, Amazon. You don't need me and I shouldn't be catering to you.

Carl: I bought my Terraforming Mars at your store!

Gary: Oh, when was that Carl?

Carl: At your Black Friday Sale.

Gary: Right, on clearance. *cough* vulture *cough*

Carl: What was that?

Gary: Anyway, this is my first day vowing to order games only for our casual customers, the ones who actually buy from us. People who allow us to sell them games through our demos and our enthusiasm.

Carl: So no more high concept bee gee gee picks?

Gary: No Carl, no more complex board games. Which even at their best, aren't as good as a bad night of D&D. Or you know, sex and pizza.