
As a Sinclair College student in 2018 Brett Ewing was one of the first people to use Sticker Heist—a problem-solving game that Sinclair Professor Mike Libassi created to give students hands-on experience with cybersecurity tasks.
Testing the prototype as a member of Sinclair’s Hacking Team added to Ewing’s excitement about defending computer systems. Libassi’s teaching had already sparked Ewing’s interest in cybersecurity. And the game’s scenario, which requires players to decode the lock of the sticker storage box called the “heist box,” ignited a new career passion in Ewing. He changed his major from computer engineering to cybersecurity.
Now as the leader of two cybersecurity companies and the nonprofit Hack Dayton, Ewing is an industry partner of Libassi’s Advanced Technological Education (ATE) grant. The project’s full title is Implementing Game-Based Learning to Recruit a Diverse Cybersecurity Workforce and Enhance Training for Technicians, but it goes by Sticker Heist as well.
Ewing uses the Sticker Heist game at Hack Dayton’s in-person monthly meetups and at industry conferences for both cybersecurity newbies and seasoned hackers to develop their skills.
“Utilizing the Sticker Heist allows us [at Hack Dayton] to always have a challenge that especially the new members really love ... The Sticker Heist acts as a great way to expose them to a whole different set of the tools that we utilize every day in the real-world jobs and the kind of experience that you're going to get, testing real infrastructure.
“ So the Sticker Heist allows us to both train up individuals as well as give the more senior ones newer and harder challenges that they can accomplish, and also help them contribute [by answering], What would you add to the Sticker Heist? How would you make it better?”
Libassi wrote in an email that it is “awesome” to have his former student as an industry partner on the grant. “Brett is top tier,” Libassi added.







