Bloodbornepkg | Updated

For red teamers, blue teamers, and Active Directory (AD) forensic analysts, few tools have revolutionized privilege escalation auditing like BloodHound. At the heart of the data collection process lies the ingestor. However, for those operating in Python environments—specifically when dealing with restricted shells, Linux-based attack machines, or cross-platform C2 frameworks—the Python implementation known as bloodbornepkg (or simply bloodhound.py ) has been the go-to solution.

We’re pleased to announce the release of , a maintenance and feature update focused on performance, data accuracy, and expanded compatibility. bloodbornepkg updated

The release is not the end—it is a new beginning. The development team has already teased version 3.0 for early 2026, which will focus on: For red teamers, blue teamers, and Active Directory

Elias moved the camera. It was fluid—silky, terrifyingly smooth 60fps. But as he looked around, he realized the Dream had changed. The workshop was boarded up. The Doll, usually kneeling by the stairs, was standing at the edge of the cliff, staring into the fog. We’re pleased to announce the release of ,

If you have automation scripts that rely on the old bloodhound.py output format, you have two paths forward.

Go to Top