"Cyber Polygon" is the name of a yearly cyber attack simulation put on by the World Economic Forum (WEF). It has been a yearly event since 2019, but it seems like they're skipping 2025.
"The question is not whether it will happen, but when."
On October 18th, 2019, another simulation was run, much like Cyber Polygon: Event 201 — an exercise depicting a global coronavirus pandemic, run by the Gates Foundation and Johns Hopkins. Less than 2 months later, the first cases of COVID-19 would erupt in Wuhan, China.
While in 2020 it was a bannable offense to discuss the idea of a lab leak from the Wuhan lab, in 2023 the head of the FBI acknowledged that his agency's investigation concluded that was the most likely scenario. The NIH was funding Gain of Function research of bat coronavirus in the Wuhan lab — a fact Dr. Fauci denied but was confirmed by members of the agency itself.
In 2021 it was revealed through a Freedom of Information Act request that the CDC had deep involvement with the creation of movies — spending $1.7 million to create an office to influence Hollywood productions, which they then used as fear programming to get a bigger budget from Congress.
The 2023 movie "Leave The World Behind," produced by the Obamas, depicts a major cyber attack that takes down the internet and causes chaos by hijacking all self-driving cars. The movie opens with the autopilot of a massive tanker ship being hijacked and crashed into a beach. In early 2024, an eerily similar crash took place in real life.
On July 8th, 2022, they ran the 3rd annual Cyber Polygon simulation. On the same day, Canada's major internet carrier "Rogers" went down with zero explanation. Rogers being down not only cut people off from cell service but also took down point-of-sale systems — meaning places like gas stations were unable to accept digital payments. As Canada is even more cashless than the US, many were unable to buy essentials.
Multiple mass outages of centralized digital services causing disruptions across the country. The pattern continues — centralized infrastructure failing simultaneously, exposing the vulnerability of systems we've been made dependent on.
"Simulations precede events. Event 201 preceded COVID. Cyber Polygon precedes the blackout. The pattern is the prediction."
Klaus Schwab referred to such an event as a "Cyber Pandemic." The WEF simulations, the Hollywood predictive programming, the real-world dress rehearsals — they all point in one direction. A major cyber event that takes down centralized digital infrastructure. When digital payments go down, when the grid fails, when the internet goes dark — what then? Actual decentralized systems are about to shine.
Simulations, predictions, and real-world events
Monitoring centralized infrastructure failures worldwide