Enderman
Windows internals, malware analysis, and OS experiments with a focus on reverse engineering and security.
Nutrition Label
Enderman delivers highly technical explorations of Windows internals, malware analysis, and operating system experiments. His content stands out for its hands-on authenticity, often using tools like IDA Pro and Registry Editor to reverse-engineer system behaviors rather than just describing them. While his core technical videos are rigorous, occasional channel updates or narrative pieces offer less depth.
Strengths
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Notes
- !Technical depth varies significantly, ranging from complex reverse engineering of DLLs to casual platform commentary.
- !Experiments often involve dangerous malware or system-breaking hacks; verify safety protocols before attempting replication.
Rating Breakdown
Breakdown across the key dimensions we rate. Methodology →
Recent Videos

The Ultimate Fix for a Forced Windows Update

Making Windows the Recycle Bin

What happens if you call your computer THIS?

We lost

My channel is getting terminated

69MB Windows 7

Windows Update malware... AGAIN

Activating Windows 11 with a phone

Using Windows 10 for its final days...

No One is Safe: Triple ClickFix (MacOS/Linux/Windows)

Why your IP address is (probably) awesome

Gross Windows 11 bootlegs

How much malware can you get from fake CAPTCHAs?

Can you spot this fake CAPTCHA?

What happens if you click a fake CAPTCHA?
Why this rating
Evidence receipts showing why each dimension is rated the way it is.
“We have permanently removed your channel from YouTube.”[0:15] →
The creator displays the actual termination email from YouTube on screen, providing irrefutable first-hand evidence of the event.
“Appeal rejected. We reviewed your channel carefully and have confirmed that it violates our spam, deceptive practices and scams policy.”[1:32] →
Demonstrates the friction point directly by showing the immediate automated rejection of the appeal, validating the 'powerless against AI' narrative.
“The only extra addition in newer versions is the Client License Service, AKA ClipSVC, which handles the Microsoft Store DRM... that service overrides the classic SPP for online activation.”[01:56] →
“The reason for the termination here is this linked channel... which is a Japanese channel that is in no way actually associated with Enderman at all.”[4:03] →
Provides specific evidence of the platform error (linking to an unrelated account) rather than just claiming it was a mistake.
“We heard back from the policy specialists... and they confirmed they will remain down... the reason is that these videos include instructions on how to bypass payment.”[8:26] →
Transparently shows the platform's final rejection and reasoning, even though it contradicts his desired outcome.
“The only correct way to do YouTube nowadays is to scale and decentralize your work... create a ton of channels... earning you semi-passive income.”[9:08] →
Shifts from the specific ban incident to a broader, subjective strategic analysis of the creator economy.