A green line appeared. The scanner had caught a live "M3U" stream. Elias copied the URL into his media player. Suddenly, the pitch appeared—the grass was vibrant green, the crowd noise was deafening, and the scoreboard was in a language he couldn’t read.

Then, he saw the link in a dusty corner of an old tech board: Download UnivIptvScaner.zip – V2.1 Final .

Curiosity got the better of him. He clicked the "Unlabeled" link. The screen flickered. Instead of a stadium, he saw a grainy, black-and-white view of a library. It was empty, save for a single book resting on a table. The title on the spine was clear: The Digital Horizon.

He clicked. The file was tiny, a mere handful of megabytes. After extracting the contents, a simple, brutalist window appeared on his screen. It wasn’t flashy. It didn’t have a "Help" section or a fancy logo. It just had an input box for an IP range and a button that said

Elias fed it a list of raw server addresses he'd found on a Pastebin page. He hit the button.