Mini - Mini Magnetic Swipe Card Reader USB or Port Powered Bi-directional

The link led to a sketchy file-hosting site covered in ads for "Single Orcs in Your Area." Leo ignored the red flags. He clicked download.

The legend of legitool_v2_cracked.zip started on a Tuesday at 3:00 AM, in the corner of a Discord server that smelled of desperation and unwashed hoodies.

legitool_v2_cracked.zip was small—only 4.2 MB. Leo unzipped it. Inside was a single executable: LegitTool.exe . He double-clicked. Nothing happened.

Leo clicked it again. Still nothing. "Garbage," he muttered, reaching for his mouse to delete the file. But the cursor didn't move. In fact, his entire screen went black.

Leo was a script kiddie with a dream: he wanted to be the best at BattleRift , a game he was objectively terrible at. He’d spent weeks hunting for a "legit" aimbot—something that looked human enough to bypass the anti-cheat but precise enough to land headshots while falling off a ladder. Then, he found it. A post by a user named X_Void_X .

Product details


  • Low-cost, high-quality design
  • Customization available
  • Bi-directional read capability
  • ISO, ANSI and AAMVA compatible
  • Up to 1,000,000 passes with ISO-conforming cards

Mini Magnetic Swipe Card Reader - Specifications

Electrical

Current USB: normal 30 mA; Suspend mode 300 uA
RS-232: Quiescent 1-2 mA typical (continuous), transmitting 8-9 typical (5ms duration), peak at power on 12 mA

Mechanical

USB & RS-232
Size
Length: 3.94” (100.0mm)
Width: 1.28” (32.5mm)
Height: 1.23” (31.3mm)
USB & RS-232
Weight
Weight: 4.5 oz. (127.57 g)
TTL 100 mm
Size
Length: 3.94" (100 mm)
Height: 1.23" (31.3mm)
Width: 1.28" (32.5mm)
TTL 101 mm
Size
Length: 4.0" (101.6 mm)
Height: 1.08" (27.4 mm)
Width: 1.62" (41.1 mm)

Environment

Temperature
Operating -30 °C to 70 °C (-22 °F to 158 °F)
Storage -40 °C to 70 °C (-40 °F to 158 °F)
Humdity  
Operating 10% to 90% noncondensing
Storage 10% to 90% noncondensing
Altitude  
Operating
0-10,000 ft. (0-3048 m.)
Storage 0-50,000 ft. (0-15240 m.)


Legitool_v2_cracked.zip -

The link led to a sketchy file-hosting site covered in ads for "Single Orcs in Your Area." Leo ignored the red flags. He clicked download.

The legend of legitool_v2_cracked.zip started on a Tuesday at 3:00 AM, in the corner of a Discord server that smelled of desperation and unwashed hoodies.

legitool_v2_cracked.zip was small—only 4.2 MB. Leo unzipped it. Inside was a single executable: LegitTool.exe . He double-clicked. Nothing happened.

Leo clicked it again. Still nothing. "Garbage," he muttered, reaching for his mouse to delete the file. But the cursor didn't move. In fact, his entire screen went black.

Leo was a script kiddie with a dream: he wanted to be the best at BattleRift , a game he was objectively terrible at. He’d spent weeks hunting for a "legit" aimbot—something that looked human enough to bypass the anti-cheat but precise enough to land headshots while falling off a ladder. Then, he found it. A post by a user named X_Void_X .