One tool at a time.

Wyrm is meant to be a line of tools, not a single gadget. This page is the whole plan and an honest label on each piece of it — what runs today, what is on the bench, and what is still only notes. Nothing here gets a launch date it hasn’t earned.

Scanning · 2.4 GHz · BLE
0threats near you
  • 3 access pointsclear
  • 1 camera vendor seenwatching
  • 1 tracker · 4 minignored
Local onlyUSB · BLE
  1. Wyrm Scout

    Find what’s watching.

    In build

    A pocket scanner for rooms you didn’t set up. It listens to the Wi-Fi and Bluetooth around you, tells you what’s there, and helps you walk over and find it. Firmware works, hardware is being built and tested.

    • Hidden Wi-Fi cameras, by vendor and by traffic shape
    • Trackers that follow you across places
    • Rogue access points and deauth bursts
    • Room sweeps, proximity finder, exportable logs
    Full spec →
  2. Scout Pro

    The senses Scout doesn’t have.

    On the bench

    Everything Scout does, plus the two sensors that catch what never touches a network: a radio power sweep for analog bugs, and an infrared finder for camera lenses. Parts chosen, nothing built.

    • RF power sweep across the common bug bands
    • Infrared lens finder for non-networked cameras
    • Everything the standard Scout does
  3. Wyrm Gate

    Watch your own house.

    Notes only

    Scout tells you about a room. Gate would tell you about your home: what every device on your network is quietly sending out, and a way to stop the ones you never agreed to. This is a sketch and a pile of notes.

    • See what each device actually talks to
    • Block the calls you didn’t sign up for
    • Runs on your network, not someone’s cloud
  4. Wyrm Vault

    Keys that never touch a network.

    Notes only

    An offline box for the things that should never sit on an internet-connected machine — keys, recovery phrases, the stuff you can’t rotate after a leak. Furthest out of anything here.

    • Air-gapped by construction, not by policy
    • Readable firmware, no hidden element
    • Recoverable without asking anyone permission

How this actually ships.

Wyrm is one person. There is no warehouse behind this and no factory waiting on an order — every unit gets built, flashed and tested by hand, so batches are small on purpose. Somewhere between ten and thirty at a time, depending on how much of the month I can give it.

How many I make depends on how many people actually want one. I don’t run ads and I’m not collecting your email to guess at demand — I post the work as it happens, and the response to that is the signal. If a lot of people want a Scout, the next batch is bigger. If a few do, it’s smaller and it still gets made.

When a batch is ready it goes up here and you buy one. No queue to join, no deposit, no place in line to lose. Sold out means the next batch is already being built.

Batch size
10–30 units, built by hand
Cadence
However long a batch honestly takes
To buy
Straight from this site, when a batch is up
Sold out?
The next one is already in progress

Questions people actually ask.

What is Wyrm?
Wyrm is a privacy-first hardware and software brand run by one person. It builds tools that work offline, keep their keys on the device, and never require an account — the opposite of gear that only functions while a company's servers are up. The first product is Wyrm Scout.
What is Wyrm Scout?
A pocket counter-surveillance scanner. You carry it into a room you didn't set up — a rental, a hotel, an office — and it finds the networked surveillance there: hidden Wi-Fi cameras matched by vendor and traffic pattern, Bluetooth trackers like AirTags and Tiles that have been following you, and rogue access points or deauthentication attacks. It costs €49 as a kit.
Does Scout send my scans anywhere?
No. The dashboard talks straight to the device over USB or Bluetooth and runs entirely in your browser on your own machine. There is no account, no cloud sync and no per-device identifier. You can verify it by opening your browser's network tab while scanning — nothing leaves.
What can Scout not detect?
Scout only sees things that talk over Wi-Fi or Bluetooth. It cannot detect analog wireless bugs on their own radio band, wired cameras recording to a local SD card, anything transmitting over 4G or 5G, or a device that is switched off. Those need a radio power sweep and an infrared lens finder, which is what the planned Scout Pro is for.
Is Wyrm open source?
No. The site and the device firmware are closed source and the repository is private. The hardware is still yours to open, repair and reflash — that is a hardware-ownership promise, not a source-code one.
How do I buy one, and how do I pay?
There is no waitlist and no queue. Devices are hand-built in batches of roughly ten to thirty, and a batch goes on sale on this site when it is ready. Payment at launch is cryptocurrency only — Bitcoin and Monero through a self-hosted BTCPay Server — with card and bank options added as the operation grows.
Can I get a refund?
Yes. Fourteen days to change your mind, as EU distance-selling law requires, plus the two-year legal guarantee on any fault that was present when the device arrived. The device has to come back as it was sent: replacing the firmware or modifying the hardware ends the change-of-mind refund and makes anything you caused your own responsibility.