All these sticker designs are free to use, add your community/company logo and make it yours


OnlyPwned

A parody of familiar subscription platforms(ykikykik), this sticker mocks the commodification of leaked data

Falcon-Strike

A parody of the recent CrowdStrike outage that triggered global BSODs

C2 – Command & Control Network

A playful fusion of cybersecurity and nostalgia. This sticker blends the serious concept of Command & Control servers with a bold, Cartoon Network inspired design

ISO 127.0.0.1 Certified Loner

A spoof of the ISO logo, mashed with localhost (127.0.0.1). This sticker proudly represents devs, hackers, and introverts who run best in self-hosted solitude

Web Application

Fun and expressive take on web application vulnerabilities. Featuring a stressed out SpiderMan

Bring Me Vulns: Wick Mode Activated(AI Generated Art)

“I don’t want peace. I want CVEs.”

31337 Scanner: Over 9000 Threats

Inspired by DBZ anime and elite hacker culture, this scouter styled sticker reads “31337”

Grand Theft Bybit

A parody of the iconic GTA logo, this design nods to the recent crypto heists

Time To Hack

HAहैCकKरER

Styled like a heavy metal band logo, this design fuses English and Devanagari (Hindi) scripts to spell “HACKER”

HASHHकैट

A fiery feline screaming hashes: this sticker combines “HASHH” and “कैट” (Hindi for cat), capturing the chaos of cracked passwords, brute force, and rage quit sessions in the digital wild

John the Who?

A stylish western spin on John the Ripper, this design features a lone cowboy cracking hashes against a red backdrop of scrambled passwords. Legendary status, unknown identity

Linux Inside: Linux on Fire

A blazing fast twist on the classic Linux mascot. Turbo Tux is here to represent speed, power, and elite sysadmin energy

Nayanmap

A blend of “Nayan” (eye in Hindi) and Nmap, this piece visualizes cyber reconnaissance. A cartographic eye scans the globe symbolizing surveillance, scanning, and mapping the unseen.

It’s Free: You Are the Product

A retro-style warning wrapped in a friendly UI. This design critiques surveillance capitalism reminding users that “free” services often come at the cost of your own data.

Zero Days Since 1337

A vintage security badge look with a twist: this design celebrates the eternal presence of zeroday exploits. No clean days just 1337 action since forever