HackerOne · VDP

SEGA Vulnerability Disclosure Program

Complete guide to SEGA's vulnerability disclosure program on HackerOne. View in-scope assets, reward amounts, response times, and tips for finding vulnerabilities.

Program Overview

SEGA runs a vulnerability disclosure program on HackerOne. The program has 9 in-scope assets and is managed by HackerOne's triage team.

9
In-Scope Assets
4h
Avg Response
0%
Efficiency

In-Scope Assets

AssetTypeMax SeverityEligible
Creative AssemblyOTHERCriticalNo Bounty
Hardlight StudiosOTHERCriticalNo Bounty
SEGA EuropeOTHERCriticalNo Bounty
SEGA JapanOTHERCriticalNo Bounty
Sports InteractiveOTHERCriticalNo Bounty
Two Point StudiosOTHERCriticalNo Bounty
community.twopointcounty.comURLCriticalNo Bounty
games2gether.comURLCriticalNo Bounty
redeem.footballmanager.comURLCriticalNo Bounty

Out-of-Scope Assets

  • Amplitude Studios
  • Relic Entertainment
  • community.companyofheroes.com
  • segashop.co.uk

Tips for Hacking SEGA

  1. Read the policy — Understand what's in scope, out of scope, and any specific testing restrictions before you start.
  2. Enumerate the attack surface — Use subdomain enumeration and directory bruteforcing to map all accessible endpoints.
  3. Focus on high-impact bugs — Look for SQL injection, SSRF, and IDOR vulnerabilities first.
  4. Test authentication flows — Check for OAuth misconfigurations and CSRF in login/signup flows.
  5. Write clear reports — Include steps to reproduce, impact assessment, and suggested remediation. Use Burp Suite to capture evidence.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I start hacking SEGA?

Sign up on HackerOne, read the program policy carefully, review the in-scope assets listed above, and start testing. Always stay within scope and follow responsible disclosure guidelines.

Does SEGA pay bounties?

No, SEGA runs a Vulnerability Disclosure Program (VDP) without monetary rewards. You may receive recognition or swag.

What types of vulnerabilities does SEGA accept?

SEGA accepts reports for vulnerabilities found in their 9 in-scope assets. Common accepted vulnerability types include XSS, SQL injection, SSRF, IDOR, authentication bypass, and RCE. Check the program policy for specific exclusions.