Name: *-Zine (Asterix)

Origin: MGL & Flush / Slovakia

1 - April 1997
2 - December 1999

Contents: A virus oriented zine that contains several viruses and source codes, several interviews with well known VX figures as well as many articles. According to the editorial the zine is meant as a H/P/A/V oriented zine but the first issue is VX only oriented. The graphic user interface and layout are very well done and user friendly. This zine sets a standard on how things can be done with a some dedicated effort and know how. Issue #2 covered all virus related topics (interviews, tutorials, essays and virus code), was written using HTML and, just like issue #1, looked very professional. An online version of both can be found here [April 2000]].


Name: 29A

Origin: 29A / Spain

1 - December 1996
2 - February 1998
3 - January 1999
4 - March 2000

Contents: These virus oriented zines contain several viruses and source codes as well as tutorials. A mouse operated VGA/ANSI browser was included with #1 while the browser of #2 initially starts with a very nice looking intro/demo. All files are available as ASCII and binary files. Issue #4 consists of an impressive collection of articles, tutorials, interviews, source codes and binaries. Viruses ranging from platforms from DOS to Windows 2000 are included.


Name: 40Hex

Origin: Phalcon-Skism / USA

1 - June 1991 2 - July 1991 3 - October 1991
4 - December 1991 5 - February 1992 6 - April 1992
7 - June 1992 8 - July 1992 9 - December 1992
10 - March 1993 11 - June 1993 12 - December 1993
13 - May 1994 14 - April 1995  

Contents: Articles, viral sources, disassemblies, viral tricks, interviews. The most well-known underground viral magazine. Use to be available in electronic and hard-copy format.


Name: Accel Virus Lab

Origin: Dr Joder / Unknown

1 - December 1998

Contents: Very simple (ascii) newsletter with subjects ranging from scene information to virus reviews.


Name: Anaconda

Origin: Viper / USA

1 - January 1992

Contents: Short .TXT file claiming to be Viper's first electronic magazine. Topics range from virus and trojan programming to editorial discussions.


Name: ARCV Newsletter

Origin: ARCV / United Kingdom

1 - August 1992

Contents: Electronic magazine released by ARCV with editorial from Apache Warrior.


Name: Amateur Virus Creation Research Group Journal

Origin: AVCR / USA

Volume 1 Issue 1 - December 1994 Volume 1 Issue 2 - February 1995

Contents: Articles, viral sources, disassemblies, tricks and techniques. Another addition to this part of the virus world the AVCR Journal started out as an ambitious project, but no new issues have been released since February 1995.


Name: BadByte

Origin: BHA / Unknown

1 - August 1999 2 - December 1999 3 - February 2000

Contents: Simple, generic ASCII newsletter with several source codes. Created by a hacking oriented group.


Name: Censor

Origin: Rabid / International

1 - November 1991

Contents: First and only E-Zine by Rabid. It is operated by a DOS GUI shell and has several articles on Rabid's viruses and of course some ranting and raving against popular AV personalities.


Name: Chaos AD

Origin: DVC / Russia

1 - May 1996 2 - Summer 1996 3 - April 1997

Contents: Released with Infected Voice #9, #10 & #11 this Russian product contained the sources to several viruses and the Amber polymorphic engine. It also contained a polymorphic BAT file infector by Reminder.


Name: Chiba City Times

Origin: Firecracker / USA

1 - April 1994 2 - December 1994 3 - March 1995

Contents: Electronic virus newspaper from the Sysop of Chiba City Times, Firecracker (former NuKE). Issue 1 contained virus sources and editorials while issue 2 featured a 2Mb demo by Wolfee J. and a copy of Azrael's NRLG. Issue 3 featured among other things Ratboy's first "tutorial" and a copy of Virogen's VICE v0.4B.


Name: Codebreakers

Origin: Codebreakers / International

1 - October 1997 2 - December 1997 3- March 1998
4 - August 1998 5 - June 1999

Contents: Virus oriented zine/tutorial aimed at teaching others how to create viruses. Comes with TASM/TLINK. Following the group's interests issue #3 also contained hacking oriented material. Issue #4 comes with a sophisticated Windows install program and a shell that includes mouse support and Midi sound. This same issue is loaded with up-to-date virus oriented articles and source codes among which the original source codes to the Windows 95 CIH viruses and the first Java virus. Issue #5 appeared after the Melissa / Source Of Kaos / Codebreaker site shutdown and centers around boot sector virus infections.


Name: CPI Newsletter

Origin: Doctor Dissector / USA

1 - June 1989 2 - July 1989

Contents: Electronic newsletter released by Doctor Dissector of C.P.I. (Corrupted Programming International).


Name: Creatures

Origin: Russia

1 - March 1999 2 - March 1999 3 - May 1999
4 - June 1999 5 - June 1999 6 - August 1999
7 - November 1999 8 - April 2000

Contents: Russian (cyrillic) computer virus newsletter with unknown viral content.


Name: Crypt Newsletter

Origin: Crypt / USA

1- August 1992 2- August 1992 3- August 1992
4- August 1992 5 - September 1992 6 - October 1992
7 - October 1992 8 - October 1992 9 - November 1992
10 - December 1992 11 - December 1992 12 - January 1993
13 - February 1993 14 - April 1993 15 - May 1993
16 - June 1993 17 - August 1993 18 - September 1993
19 - October 1993 20 - November 1993 21 - December 1993
22 - February 1994 23 - March 1994 24 - April 1994
25 - May 1994 26 - July 1994 27 - September 1994
28 - November 1994 29 - January 1995 30 - April 1995
31 - May 1995 32 - July 1995 33 - September 1995
34 - November 1995 35 - February 1996 36 - March 1996
37 - June 1996 38 - August 1996 39 - October 1996
40 - January 1997 41 - March 1997 42 - May 1997
43 - July 1997 44 - September 1997 45 - November 1997
46 - January 1998 47 - March 1997 48 - May 1998
49 - not released? 50 - August 1998 51 - October 1998
52 - January 1999 53 - March 1999 54 - April 1999
55 - June 1999 56 - August 1999 57 - October 1999
58 - November 1999 59 - January 2000 60 -June 2000

Contents: Articles, viral sources, disassemblies, tricks and techniques. Editor is Urnst Kouch which is the handle of George D. Smith who in 1994 published the book "The Virus Creations Labs", an inside look at the virus scene. As of issue 24 the newsletter does not contain any viral material anymore. Issue 23 exists in a "viral" and a "non-viral" edition. Well known virus writers as Kohntark, Nikademus and Stormbringer contributed to the newsletter. This newsletter slowly drifted away from computer viruses as it's main subject, it now contains material about computer security in general and is just of minor interest for those looking for computer virus specific news.


Name: CVC/CVL Magazine

Origin: CVC / Korea

1 - June 1997 2 - September 1997 3 - March 1998
4 - May 1998    

Contents: This e-zine contains several viruses, source codes and virus related articles. The e-zine is written in the Korean language. Some articles and sources were 'borrowed' from other e-zines. Also included in issue #1 are two versions of the Mini Polymorphic Engine by Kiminwoo. #3 of the zine is released by under the CVL name.


Name: Da Holocaust Chronical's

Origin: Computa GangstaZ / Unknown

1 - December 1996

Contents: This e-zine contains several viruses and source codes although is has articles on non virus issues.


Name: DDT Magazine

Origin: DDT / Spain


1 - May 1999

Contents: This is the long awaited first issue of the e-zine by DDT Virus Studios. It contains several interviews, many tutorials and viruses.

See: DDT: another group dies with its 1st issue.


Name: The Diabolical Judges Magazine

Origin: The Diabolical Judges / Unknown

1 - January 1998

Contents: This e-zine does not pretend to be something new for the VX-scene. It is basically a collection of old and well known tutorials taken from other E-zines.


Name: DIE Magazine

Origin: ASM / International

1 - July 1999

Contents: A virus oriented zine that contains several viruses and source codes. Contains "secret area".


Name: Divide By Zero Zine

Origin: Divide By Zero / Russia

1 - 1996-1997

Contents: No apparent viral content but probably group zine of Divide By Zero.


Name: Duke's Virus Labs

Origin: SMF

1 - August 1998 2 - November 1998 3 - December 1998
4 - February 1999 5 - March 1999 6 - April 1999
7 - July 1999 8 - August 1999 9 - December 1999
10 - July 2000

Contents: This electronic magazine released by a Russian coding group consists of source codes and binaries of viruses, several tutorials, several virus creation kits (batch, macro, HLL) and some polymorphic engines. Issue #2 exists both in a ANSI and a HTML format. Some guest authors for DVL later gravitated to Top Device, an independent online VX e-zine originating from the Russian VX scene.


Name: Evolution

Origin: YAM

1 - June 1992 2 - November 1992 3 - February 1993

Contents: Electronic magazine released by YAM featuring ready made viruses, source codes, techniques and articles.


Name: FCF Zine

Origin: FCF

1 - March 2000

Contents: HTML (frame/JS) based zine with cracking, hacking and virus content. Several virus writing tutorials, assembler tutorials, virus binaries and source codes are included. The zines is written in the Hungarian language. The online version can be found here [April 2000].


Name: Final Chaos

Origin: UCSI


1 - January 2000

Contents: Electronic magazine released with a DOS based viewer. It consists of a collection of interviews, tutorials, essays, binary samples and source codes ranging from Win32 viruses, via HTML/script viruses to macro viruses.


Name: G9N

Origin: The Spy / Argentina

1 - May 2000

Contents: ASCII based magazine with several articles, source codes, binaries and utilities that were available throughout the scene around the time the zine was released. It also contains The Spy's Vampirism Toolkit (TSVT) by the zine's editor.


Name: God@rky's Virus Heaven Newsletter

Origin: God@rky / USA

1 - November 1996 2 - December 1996 3 - ? 1997

Contents: From the editor: "This newsletter has little purpose other than to keep you all aware of what is going on, and to give you someplace else to turn as the presence of Vx magazines continues to dwindle." "This is just another medium for you to recieve [sic] info on what is going on in the Vx world, and maybe learn something if I decide to type something worth reading."
The zine was discontinued after God@rky stopped actively participating in the VX world.


Name: HEX-files

Origin: Putoksa Kawayan / Philippines


1 - December 1997 2 - March 1998 3 - June 1998
4 - November 1998

Contents: Articles, viral sources and disassemblies specifically focused on the Filipino virus scene.

From the zine's intro:

To give HEX-FILES a direction and purpose, I formulated the following objectives:

1. To present virii that originated from the Philippines, both confirmed and widely believed to be of Philippine origin. From hereon, these virii are collectively referred to as PhVx;

2. To serve as a forum for Filipino virus authors to present their work;

3. To maintain a list of PhVx; and

4. To encourage and promote standardization of names used for PhVx.


Name: Holokaust Zine

Origin: Holokaust Henky / Spain

1 (Beta) - December 1999

Contents: Collection of copies of articles from several well known zines and some well known source codes. From the creator of EMPD.


Name: Immortal EAS Virus Magazine

Origin: Immortal EAS / The Netherlands


95.1 - June 1995

Contents: Articles, viral sources, disassemblies, viral tricks.


Name: Infected Moscow

Origin: SG(WW) / Russian

1 - January 1997

Contents: After some relocating of the group this is SG(WW)'s first new ezine. It continues on the same foot as Infected Voice and is written in Russian.


Name: Infected Voice

Origin: SG(WW) / Russian

Russian Issues:

1 - September 1994 2 - October 1994 3 - December 1994
4 - January 1995 5 - February 1995 6 - April 1995
7 - July 1995 8 - December 1995 9 (Moscow) - April 1996
9 (Kiev) - May 1996 10 - November 1996 11 - May 1997
12 - May 1998 13 - unknown 14 - unknown
15 - December 1999

English Issues:

1 - June 1996 2 - September 1997

Contents: E-zines consisting of among other things virus oriented assembly programming techniques, virus source codes and a group application form. Issue #1 in the English language is a compilation of seven of the Russian issues while issue #2 in the English language is a compilation of Russian issues #8 thru #11. For a while Infected Voice could be found on the WWW. Issues 13 and 14 were released as 'online' versions. In December 1999 Issue #15 was apparently released in paper form, an electronic version has not been seen.


Name: Infectious Disease Magazine

Origin: Virulent Graffiti / USA

1 - July 1992 2 - December 1992 3 - March 1993

Contents: Electronic magazine released by Virulent Graffiti with Attitude Adjuster doing the main editing. Features are
disassemblies, techniques, source codes reviews and articles.


Name: Insane Reality Magazine

Origin: Immortal Riot / Sweden

1 - July 1993 2 - November 1993 3 - January 1994
4 - April 1994 5 - July 1994 6 - November 1994
7 - December 1995 8 - December 1996  

Contents: Articles, viral sources, disassemblies, interviews. As of #8 Insane Reality is a product of IR/G due to a merger of Genesis and Immortal Riot. Issue #8 had the first TSR Windows 95 virus.


Name: Janus

Origin: JVS / International

1 - November 1998

Contents: The very simple (ascii) first zine of this now disbanded group contains several source codes, a small tutorial and an interview with Cyberyoda.


Name: Kefrens Zine

Origin: Kefrens / Germany


1 - July 2000(*)

Contents: This ASCII based zine with a Windows viewer contains several interviews, source codes, tutorials and essays. (*)While issue #1 was released as an afterhought after the Kefrens group ceased to exist the majority of the files were generated late 1999.


Name: Kollywabbles Virus Newsletter

Origin: Kollywabble / USA

1 - January 1996 2 - January 1996 3 - January 1996

Contents: Very simple (ascii) newsletter with subjects ranging from AV to some source codes.


Name: Lamers Must Die

Origin: SPS / Russia

1 - June 1997 2 - June 1998 3 - January 1999

Contents: Very simple (ascii) newsletter from Russia with limited viral content.


Name: LineZer0 Network Magazine

Origin: LineZer0 / Austria

 


1 - July 1999
2 - July 2000

Contents: Zines with cracking and hacking information that contain several (mainly macro) viruses and source codes. Issue #1 was released in a DOS and a Windows version. Issue #2 uses a RTF viewer for it's RTF data files and contains cracking and viral information (many sources and tutorials) and also has several interviews with people from the scene. It also signals the end of the viral part of the LineZero group. The viewers for both issues have some very nice (graphical, special effects) features.


Name: Lucky Vir Magazine

Origin: Lucky Virus Group / Germany

1 - Unknown 1997

Contents: Unoriginal collection of hacks/copies of articles from the 29A #1 zine this was released during a 1997 attempt to create a German virus group. Some macro viruses from the author are known.


Name: Matrix Zine

Origin: Matrix / Russia

1 - April 2000
2 - August 2000

Contents: Release 1 is a HTML based e-zine that contains interviews, several tutorials/articles, tools and viruses (binary and source). Release 2 consists of ASCII text files with a 32 bit reader and it also contains interviews, several tutorials/articles, tools and viruses (binary and source).


Name: Metaphase Magazine

Origin: Metaphase VX Team / International

1 - November 1998
2 - August 2000

Contents: Both zines of the Metaphase VX Team were released in the Windows HLP format and contain the source codes to several viruses of all kinds (batch, VBA, HLL and ASM) and several virus creation kits. They also has several interviews and some basic tutorials.


Name: Minotauro Magazine

Origin: Digital Anarchy / Argentina

1 - May 1994 2 - July 1994 3 - August 1994
4 - October 1994 5 - November 1994 6 - December 1994
7 - May 1995 8 - October 1995 9 - May1996
10 - November 1996 11 - April 1997  

Contents: Articles, viral sources, disassemblies, viral tricks. The first 3 issues are available in English translations.


Name: Moon Bug

Origin: TulaAnti&ViralClub / Russia

1 - September 1996 2 - May 1997 3 - September 1997
4 - December 1997 5 - May 1998 6 - June 1998
7 - August 1998 8 - November 1998 9 - January 1999
10 - May 1999 11 - October 1999

Contents: Among other subjects this magazine in the Russian language has several viral articles, sources and compiled viruses. While Moon Bug died a quiet death late 1999 authors later gravitated to Top Device, an independent online VX e-zine originating from the Russian VX scene.


Name: Mors Ultima Ratio

Origin: Hail and Kill / Spain

1 - June 1998

Contents: Small (ASCII) zine covering some viral subjects and with the source code to one virus by the group. The zine is in Spanish.


Name: Nemesis

Origin: Nemesis / Unknown

1 - December 1995

Contents: E-zine released by a "lone" virus writer looking to establish himself in the VX-scene. What follows is a piece of his intro:

" I don't claim to be some sort of virus god. In fact, I'm just a beginner with big ideas. I will never say something like "I'm working on a multipartite, block moving, mutating EXE/COM/DLL/OVR/SYS/BAT/OBJ/BIN/GOD infector" since I probably never will write such a thing. You may see some simple memory resident and runtime virii with alot of simple avoidance techniques but nothing so grand as what is found in the VLAD or 40HEX magazines."


Name: NuKE Info Journal

Origin: NuKE / USA


1 - October 1991 2 - February 1992 3 - May 1992
4 - August 1992 5 - March 1993 6 - May 1993
7 - August 1993 8 - June 1994  

Contents: Articles, viral sources, disassemblies, viral tricks, interviews. Issues 9 thru 11 were released by Aristotle after his rift with NuKE, therefore not considered as true Nuke Info Journals.


Name: PFlorik

Origin: SoftProject / Italy

1 - December 1997 2 - March 1998

Contents: Viral (ASCII) newsletter containing some source codes and some general VX topics. Both came with virus code samples..


Name: PlasmaMag

Origin: Dark Conspiracy / International

1 - April 1996 2 - September 1996

Contents: E-zines consisting mostly of virus source codes and debug scripts of viruses released by this new virus writing group. The magazine uses a with ANSI-art decorated user interface and looks well made. The second issue contained the first Macro Virus Development Kit.

 


Name: Pinoy Virus Writers Magazine

Origin: PVW / Philippines


1 - March 1998 2 - July 1998 3 - August 1998
4 - December 1998 5 - April 1999

Contents: Generic first try at an electronic virus magazine released by the Pinoy Virus Writers. Subsequent issues contain more of the same, specifically about the Philipino virus scene.


Name: Ren Zine

Origin: Renegade / Italy

1 - September 1998 2 - November 1998 3 - September 1999

Contents: Electronic magazine (Italian) released by Renegade. This zine is written in Italian and HTML and needs an external HTML viewer.


Name: Resi Duo

Origin: Cordoba / Argentina

1 - November 1995

Contents: Electronic magazine (Spanish) released by Code Rebel and Andromeda from Cordoba Argentina. The magazine uses a with ANSI-art decorated user interface and a generic virus generator is included. The zine is the successor of the Sentinel Anarchist zine by the same people.


Name: Revelation

Origin: The Trinity

1 - April 1994

Contents: Electronic magazine released by The Trinity. Features aretechniques, source codes reviews and articles.


Name: RSA Magazine

Origin: RSA / Ukraine

1 - June 1997

Contents: One of the examples of better user interfaces, this zine has a professional Windows interface. The first release contains several viruses and several polymorphic engines.



 


Name: Russian Virus Magazine

Origin: RVM / Russia

1 - January 1998 1 Up. - January 1998 2 - January 1998

Contents: Initially available thru WWW issue 1 of this zine contains several polymorphic/mutation engines (ZCME, PE), several new viral techniques and some anti-anti-virus tricks. Subsequent issues contained techniques specifically aimed at defeating Russian AV software.


Name: Russian Virus Review

Origin: Duke / Russia

1 - September 1999
2 - July 2000

Contents: A HTML newsletter (Russian) by Duke of SMF that contains little VX material but with VX news and information


Name: Sentinel Anarchist

Origin: Cordoba / Argentina

1 - June 1995 2 - June 1995

Contents: Electronic magazine (Spanish) released by Code Rebel and Andromeda from Cordoba Argentina. The magazine uses a with ANSI-art decorated user interface. The zine is the predecessor of the Resi Duo zine by the same people.


Name: Shadow Dancer Zine

Origin: Shadow Dancer / Indonesia

1 - March 2000

Contents: ASCII based electronic zine largely written using the Malay (Indonesian) language. Comes with several generic viruses.


Name: ShadowVX Zine

Origin: ShadowVX

1 - March 2000

Contents: HTML based electronic zine with emphasis on computer viruses but with some hacking related material. Comes with two VBS script virus sources.


Name: SLAM

Origin: SLAM / International

  Special - January 1997  
1 - January 1997 2 - May 1997 3 - July 1997
4 - May 1998    

Contents: Zines initially consisting of a lot of macro virus material, including the source code to Nightmare Joker's Word Macro Virus generator Demolition Kit but in later issues code ans sources of more "regular" (ASM etc.) viruses were released. Issue #3 included Lord of Navan's Pascal virus generator Lord Of Navan's Invasion Generator (LONIG)


Name: Social Distortion

Origin: Misdirected Youth / Russia

1 - October 1999

Contents: An ASCII zine (Russian) with some VX related articles, source codes and debug scripts.


Name: Source Of Kaos

Origin: Armand / USA


1 - May 1996 2 - January 1997 3 - June 1997

Contents: Articles, viral sources, disassemblies, viral tools, collection info.


Name: The Source

Origin: Trinity / USA


0 - June 1994

Contents: Articles, viral sources, disassemblies, viral tricks, hacking phreaking.


Name: Technological Illusions Magazine

Origin: Technological Illusions / International

1 - March 1999

Contents: Many articles, tutorials, interviews, viral sources and viral tricks in this ASCII based magazine. Nice first issue with a lot of information.


Name: Top Device

Origin: Russia

1 - June 1997
2 - December 1997
3 - March 2000
4 - April 2000 5 - May 2000 6 - June 2000
7 - July 2000

Contents: Originally a zine with this name started out as a hacker oriented zine (Issue 1 and 2) from the Digital Information Pirates Group (DIPG) but with the development of the Top Device website [April 2000] a VX oriented 'online' zine was started and the monthly archived zine is downloadable as such. Many well known personalities of the Russian VX scene contribute to the zine with tutorials, articles, source codes and binaries.

Editor's note:

" PEOPLE TAKES PART AT THE PROJECT

It hasn't been a long time since the russian VX scene started a new and interesting project - Top Device, an on-line e-zine about viruses and virmakers. The first and second issues of Top Device were dedicated to phreaking and hacking skills mostly, but the On-line issue changed this direction to that of viruses. The editors group consists of - meza (new dude on the vx scene) and Yanush Milovski (ex-DRuG, one of the authors of Top Device and MooNBuG) Also taking part in the project are Deviator (Hazard, one of the authors of DVL), one of the best russian coders, SMT (SMF, DVL e-zine), a young but the very talented coder Mongoose (Misdirected Youth, editor of the Social Distortion e-zine, one of the authors of MooNBuG), the best russian coder Z0mbie (ex-29A) and a lot of other cool coderz from the Ex-USSR. The editors of others russian VX e-zines are giving us their support.

WHY DID WE DECIDE TO MAKE THIS E-ZINE?

In the ex-USSR VX scene there is a paradoxical situation: between about twenty active virmakers there are three russian VX e-zines. I don't want to say anything bad about these e-zines, but there are not enough virmakers to make three interesting e-zines. And each e-zine is less interesting than common ones. "Top Device" is our attempt to unite the virmakers that live in the huge land mass of the ex-USSR and create a real Russian VX Scene (and up russian virmaking to a higher level). The second reason (why we decided to make TopDevice) - we want to find new, young and talented coders and show them that writing viruses is really cool and interesting. A lot of dudes, who have potential in virmaking don't know how interesting it is. And our e-zine is also playing a popularization role. Why is it important? Well, it is very easy to understand - new people - new ideas, which you get, we hope, from our e-zine. Real virmaking is elite work, but every man who has enough information can enter into to this elite circle. For that reason, this e-zine is dedicated to learning. But it not meant to be a tutorial e-zine - virmakers with different skill levels find in it a lot of useful information.

THE MAIN IDEA OF THE E-ZINE

"Top Device" is a online, noncommercial e-zine consisting of cool tutorials and articles about virmakers, the VX-scene, AV soft and, of course, new viral technologies in different groups: DOS, Win32, Script, Trojan, Anti-AV, and many others. Top Device is not related to any VX-group. And although the first two issues were released by the DRuG team, now Top Deivce is a wholly independent e-zine.

WHY IS IT ON-LINE?

In the world's VX scene, an exclusivly on-line zine is unusual. Why is it better than the old zipped e-zines? The first reason is, of course, that an on-line e-zine wins readers, as they always get the newest information. It also wins authors, as now their creations don't deal with any deadlines, and they can work quietly, and only thing that makes them work fast is wanting to show their creations to our readers as soon as possible. But not every dude in the ex-USSR is wired to the Internet, therefore we shall pack all the HTML's into an archieve and distribute it in that off-line form.

DISCLAIMER

If you want to take part in the creation of a great new on-line e-zine and you want to take part in uniting the World and ex-USSR virus scenes - we waiting for some VX-related materials and articles from you. We have only one condition: your materials are exclusive (not published before publication in our e-zine)."


Name: TPVO / OVEL Magazine

Origin: TPVO / Taiwan

1 - April 1995 2 - August 1995
3 - March 1996 4 - September 1996

Contents: Ezine consisting of articles, sources and codes. Issue #3 had the source and code to Dark Killer's Mutation Engine (DKME) 1.0. As of issue #4 the name OVEL (Organization of Virus Examination Lab) was used.


Name: Turmoil

Origin: LT/RSA & LT / International

1 - November 1996 2 - May 1997

Contents: These virus oriented zines contain several viruses and source codes. A VGA/ANSI browser is included. Issue #2 contained Unknown's Virus Creator UVC.


Name: VBB Magazine

Origin: VBB / International


1 - June 1996 2 - June 1996
3 - August 1996 4 - January 1997

Contents: E-zine consisting of among other things virus oriented assembly programming techniques, a virus source code and a group application form. All releases had Word Macro viruses either in source or code format. As of #4 hacking related material was being introduced.


Name: Virii Search

Origin: Criminal Minded / USA

1 - 1992 2 - July 1992 3 - August 1992

Contents: Electronic virus newsletter by Criminal Minded featuring virus techniques, articles and source codes.


Name: Virogen's Code Journal

Origin: Virogen / USA

1 - May 1995

Contents: This one and only issue was one of Virogen's attempt at releasing his virus material. It contains the source and code of version 0.5 of VICE, his polymorphic engine, a couple of signature extractors and his CodeJournal virus.
An EGA/VGA/ANSI browser/viewer is included.


Name: Virus Brasil

Origin: Brasil

1 - January 1999 2 - April 1999 3 - July 1999
4 - October 1999 5 - January 2000 6 - April 2000
7 - July 2000

Contents: This (initially) ASCII based zine contains material (source, debug scripts and essays) covering the Brasilian virus scene. Issue #3 was released in both ASCII and HTML, Issue #4 was released in Rich Text Format (.RTF). While issue #6 was released in multiple formats issue #7 was only available as a Win16 executable (Compiled HTML using the Info Courier 1.38 similar to VDAT).


Name: VLAD Magazine

Origin: VLAD / Australia


1 - July 1994 2 - October 1994 3 - February 1995
4 - April 1995 5 - August 1995 6 - February 1996
AF - April 1996 7 - October 1996  

Contents: Articles, viral sources, disassemblies, viral tricks, interviews. Issue #6 contained the source to the "first" Windows 95 virus, called Boza by the press and AV community but it was called Bizatch by its author, Quantum. Issue AF is an April Fool's edition filled with weird virus material, at the same time it is the first issue after the leadership changed from Metabolis to Qark. In October 1996 issue #7 was the retirement issue of the VLAD magazine.


Name: VX United

Origin: Nuclei / VX United

1 - July 1998 2 - December 1998

Contents: Created by several people from the virus underground this e-zine did not originate from a specific virus group. It contains a mix of sources, codes, interviews and techniques pertinent to recent computer virus events.


Name: VXtasy

Origin: Lord Julus / Rumania

1 - August 1999

Contents: Created by one individual from the virus underground this e-zine did not originate from a specific virus group. It contains a mix of sources, codes, an interview and techniques with emphasis on Win32 virus programming. It has a viewer for ASCII data files.


Name: VTC Newsletter

Origin: Shadow Seeker / VTC

1 - February 1999

Contents: Created as an internal newsletter for VTC members it covers some virus collecting specific subjects. As so many things in the VX scene it never received a follow on. This was due to the disbanding of VTC.


Name: V-Zone

Origin: V-Zone / Irkutsk

1 - Oktober 1997

Contents: This e-zine contains several virus source codes (ASM, WordBasic) and some virus technology pieces.


Name: Xine

Origin: IKX / International


1 - November 1996 2 - April 1997 3 - May 1998
4 - September 1999

Contents: A mix of tutorials, sources and virus codes these E-zines cover many subjects in the HPAV scene. Issue #2 contains several Commodore Amiga related virus articles and tutorials. Issue #3 was loaded with many viruses and tutorials, many of them related to 32-bit platform infections. After a long pause issue #4 was released. It again contains many articles, viruses and other virus related material.