Click the button to browse for your SAM file. It is usually located at: C:\Windows\System32\config\SAM Step 3: Modify the User Click (Re)open to load the list of users. Select the username you want to modify from the list.

Unlike password crackers that attempt to brute-force a login screen, this tool directly modifies the SAM (Security Account Manager) file—the database where Windows stores hashed user passwords.

(often abbreviated ntpwedit ) is a lightweight, offline registry editor designed to clear or change the password of any local user account on a Windows NT-based operating system (Windows 2000 through Windows 10, and some Windows Server versions).

The version number "v0.7" suggests that this tool is still in its early stages of development. Software versioning often follows a sequence where: