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/root shirt -
commit push repeat shirt -
just committing to it corgi shirt -
my code works i fear nothing. skeleton shirt -
the build is broken so am i shirt -
my code is self-documenting shirt -
it worked in staging Sweatshirt -
terminal where magic happens Sweatshirt -
imposter syndrome survivor shirt -
i code better under pressure shirt -
van gogh desk shirt -
skeleton cybersecurity sweatshirt -
jason engineer sweatshirt -
git status shirt -
hot boys are coders shirt -
i paused my game to debug sweatshirt -
js alchemist shirt -
it worked in prod shirt -
ctrl + alt + scream shirt -
a nightmare on main branch sweatshirt -
the overengineer shirt -
runs fine on python 2 shirt -
stack overflow lifeline shirt -
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Ringspun cotton, 240gsm, preshrunk. Wear-tested by real devs.
What are
Hacker Shirts?
Hacker shirts are graphic tees that reference offensive security, CTF culture, phreaking history, and the broader underground tradition of breaking systems to understand how they actually work. Designs cover red team humor, exploit references, payload jokes, and the specific aesthetic of the security underground from the 90s phreaking days through today. Code Culture has 327 hacker shirt designs on 240gsm preshrunk ringspun cotton.
- CTF playersDEF CON, HackTheBox, TryHackMe
- Penetration testersRed team day jobs
- Bug bounty huntersHackerOne and Bugcrowd grinders
- Security researchersCVE hunting and disclosure
- Phreaking historiansCaptain Crunch era appreciators
- Hackathon attendeesBuilders who break things first
Hacker Shirts
Hacker shirts that honor the actual culture, not the Hollywood version. Code Culture has 327 designs covering everything from 90s phreaking history to modern bug bounty work, CTF culture, and the specific aesthetic of the security underground that has existed since the BBS era. No green binary rain shirts, no hoodie wearing silhouettes with face masks, just real references that land with people who actually do the work.
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For professional security framing, cybersecurity shirts covers the modern corporate security catalog. Cybersecurity gifts sorts the same content for gift shopping. For adjacent technical cultures, Linux shirts covers the OS layer most hackers live in and DevOps shirts overlaps with the systems work.
Designs lean into specific references. The 2600 magazine era, Captain Crunch and blue box phreaking, the L0pht and L0phtCrack lineage, modern CTF teams, DEF CON culture, the specific aesthetic of running a payload at a competition and seeing it land. Bug bounty grind humor, full disclosure debate references, and the eternal question of what counts as a real hacker versus a script kiddie all show up in the collection.
Fabric is 240gsm ringspun cotton, preshrunk. Sizes XS to 3XL unisex. Free shipping kicks in at 3+ shirts. US delivery is 5 to 7 business days, international 10 to 14. The collection refreshes with new designs as the security culture evolves and new tooling and references emerge.
The catalog covers both historical and modern hacker culture so it reads correctly to security folks across age ranges. The 90s phreaking and BBS era designs land hardest with senior security engineers who remember the original culture. The modern CTF and bug bounty designs land harder with younger practitioners who came up through HackTheBox and HackerOne. Returns are accepted within 30 days for unworn shirts. Bulk pricing applies at 10 or more shirts which works for CTF team gifts or DEF CON group orders.
Frequently
Asked
Questions
- Are these shirts okay to wear to DEF CON?
- Yes, the collection is built for DEF CON, BSides, and similar venues. The designs reference real security culture rather than the Hollywood hacker aesthetic, so they land with the audience instead of getting eye rolls. CTF specific shirts, phreaking history designs, and bug bounty grind humor are the strongest picks for security conferences. The badge collecting designs are popular conference gifts.
- What is the difference between hacker shirts and cybersecurity shirts?
- Hacker shirts lean into older underground culture, phreaking history, CTF and offensive security references, and the more rebellious side of the field. Cybersecurity shirts cover modern professional security work across red team, blue team, AppSec, SOC, and GRC roles. There is overlap but hacker reads as cultural and historical, cybersecurity reads as professional and current.
- Will these shirts get me in trouble in a corporate setting?
- Most do not, but some lean aggressive enough that conservative corporate environments might raise an eyebrow. The historical references and CTF humor read fine in technical workplaces. The more pointed offensive security designs like specific exploit references or payload jokes are better for hacker conferences and meetups than the office. Pick by context for your specific workplace culture.
- Do you have shirts about specific CTF teams or competitions?
- Yes, the collection has designs referencing DEF CON CTF, the major HackTheBox and TryHackMe events, and the broader CTF competition culture. Specific team logos are not licensed, but generic CTF culture humor, flag capture jokes, and the specific moment of submitting a flag and watching the leaderboard update are all represented in the catalog.
- Are these shirts for actual hackers or just hacker aesthetic fans?
- Both audiences are represented but the catalog leans toward people who actually do the work. The references assume technical context: knowing what a buffer overflow is, understanding why full disclosure matters, recognizing actual tool names. Hacker aesthetic fans who do not work in security might miss the deeper references but the visual designs still land. Real practitioners get the most value from the collection.