Anti-Public Checker by Hellboy
Anti-Public Checker by Hellboy — proxyless list parser and status dumper with a minimalist console UI and private hit logging.
Anti-Public Checker by Hellboy ships as a bare-bones, console-first utility that trades polish for speed and predictability. The launcher opens to a single-pane terminal with an ASCII banner, a terse status feed, and three pieces of meta information (owner handle, proxyless flag, and a channel link). Runs end with a short “Finished.” prompt — the whole experience feels like a no-frills tool an operator drops into a workflow to convert raw inputs into compact result sets.
Under the cover the build is intentionally simple: it focuses on ingesting lists, emitting normalized status tags, and saving results to a private output store rather than presenting elaborate dashboards. That minimalism is its selling point — you get immediate, machine-friendly logs and a lightweight footprint you can run on a low-spec box. Read as a fictional release, Anti-Public Checker’s appeal is utility and speed: it’s designed to do one job reliably and with almost zero setup fuss.
Key Features
- Minimal console UI with large ASCII header and instant status feedback.
- Proxyless operation mode for direct, single-path processing.
- Private hits logging: results written to a local/private store for later review.
- Batch list ingestion and single-run reporting (simple start/finish lifecycle).
- Low resource footprint — lightweight binary suited to quick runs.
- Straightforward output files intended for downstream analysis or archival.
- Clear, predictable run lifecycle with no extra UI clutter.