Superscan-10-02-13 Download

Unlike Nmap (which may require Npcap or admin privileges for certain scans), Superscan 10-02-13 uses raw Windows sockets and works with basic user rights for most functions.


The original checksum published in the README is: superscan-10-02-13 download

MD5:  8f6d2f5a1c2a5e7d9a2b0f3c1e9b7a4c
SHA1: d5b3c8e4f9c0a7e6b3c1d2e5f9a6c8b4d7e9f2a1

After downloading:

# PowerShell
Get-FileHash -Path C:\Tools\Superscan\superscan-10-02-13.exe -Algorithm SHA1

Make sure the output matches the SHA1 value above. If it does not, delete the file and repeat the download from the Wayback snapshot (or try a different archive snapshot). Never trust a binary that does not match the official hash. Unlike Nmap (which may require Npcap or admin

In the world of network diagnostics and security auditing, few tools have achieved the legendary status of Superscan. Developed by the now-defunct Foundstone (later acquired by McAfee), Superscan became the industry gold standard for port scanning, host discovery, and network service detection during the late 1990s and early 2000s. Among the many versions released, one specific build—superscan-10-02-13—has garnered a cult following among legacy system administrators, cybersecurity historians, and retro-computing enthusiasts. The original checksum published in the README is:

This article provides everything you need to know about the superscan-10-02-13 download, including its features, compatibility, legitimate use cases, download sources, installation steps, and important security considerations.