The Remote Kill Switch I Built That Melts Everything in Sight
PROJECTS


Total Control. No Warnings.
I’ve been working on something for a while. A project I designed for complete system obliteration — triggered remotely, silently, and with surgical precision.
It’s a Telegram-triggered Dead Man Trigger — the kind of thing you deploy when a device falls into the wrong hands, or when you want to make sure nothing is left behind.
Once I send the /destroy command… there’s no going back.
How It Works
As soon as the target machine receives the command from my private Telegram bot, the system locks down. Then, chaos unfolds in six stages.
Breakdown of the Trigger Sequence
1. Terminal Takeover — in Russian
The screen instantly flips to black. A full-screen terminal appears. And then line by line — in Russian — it begins printing system commands:
“Удаление System32…” (Deleting System32…)
“Форматирование жесткого диска…” (Formatting hard drive…)
“Загрузка вируса: ЧЕРНАЯ ДЫРА.exe” (Loading virus: BLACK HOLE.exe)
The Russian is intentional — a psychological tactic. It buys time while confusing whoever’s looking at the screen.
2. File Wipe
Next, it starts erasing directories — fast.
You’ll see lines like:
Deleting: C:\Windows\System32\drivers\acpi.sys Deleting: D:\Videos\Vacation2022.mp4
This isn’t a joke. By now, if someone’s watching the screen, they will know what is going on but by that time it will already be too late.
3. Windows Defender Alert (Too Late)
Suddenly, a Windows Defender alert pops up:
⚠️ Threat detected: Trojan:Win32/Ryuk
Action: Remediation Required
This is dropped on purpose — not to stop the process, but to reinforce the fear that it’s too late.
4. Webcam Snapshot Flash
Mid-wipe, the screen flashes white — which indicates a webcam capture.
No explanation. No logs. Just enough to leave them wondering:
“Was I just photographed?”
5. BSOD — Critical Process Died
Then comes the Blue Screen of Death.
Stop Code: CRITICAL_PROCESS_DIED
This is where most attackers stop.
But I don’t.
6. “Restarting…” — The Final Stage
After a while, the BSOD fades to a pure black screen:
Restarting...
● ● ●
This isn't for show. This final screen is to buy time — a short delay to ensure that background destruction routines have finished wiping what they were designed to target.
By the time the screen clears, everything that mattered is already unrecoverable.
Why I Built It
There are situations where data must never be recovered.
Where the person sitting at the machine is not the one who should be.
Where you need to pull the plug remotely — no questions asked.
This system is for those moments.