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Cryptocurrency wallets

How to identify and crack an Ethereum Wallet (SCRYPT) hash

Identify an Ethereum Wallet (SCRYPT) hash and crack it with ready-to-run hashcat and John the Ripper commands. Slow by design.

hashcat mode -m 15700John format ethereum-opencl

Ethereum Wallet (SCRYPT) is an cryptocurrency wallet hash type. It uses a deliberately slow, salted key-derivation scheme, so only weak or short passwords are realistically recoverable. This page shows how to recognise it and the exact commands to attack it.

All identification runs locally in WebAssembly. The commands below write the hash to a local file on your machine — nothing is sent to this site.

Identifying the hash

The hash identifier on the home page detects Ethereum Wallet (SCRYPT) entirely in your browser — your hash is never uploaded. A typical example looks like this:

$ethereum$s*262144*1*8*...

Cracking Ethereum Wallet (SCRYPT) with hashcat

Save the hash to a file and run hashcat in mode -m 15700. Expect this to be slow — use a focused wordlist. Start with a wordlist such as rockyou.txt:

echo '$ethereum$s*262144*1*8*...' > hash.txt && hashcat -m 15700 hash.txt /usr/share/wordlists/rockyou.txt

Add a rule set to mutate dictionary words (capitalisation, leetspeak, appended digits) and dramatically widen coverage:

echo '$ethereum$s*262144*1*8*...' > hash.txt && hashcat -m 15700 hash.txt /usr/share/wordlists/rockyou.txt -r /usr/share/hashcat/rules/best64.rule

Cracking Ethereum Wallet (SCRYPT) with John the Ripper

John the Ripper can attack the same hash with the ethereum-opencl format:

echo '$ethereum$s*262144*1*8*...' > hash.txt && john --format=ethereum-opencl --wordlist=/usr/share/wordlists/rockyou.txt hash.txt