雅伎著

Vancouver Cybersecurity Students Hack Their Way to Third Place at CyberSci 2025 CTF Competition

News Staff| December 4, 2025

Nine graduate students achieved a significant milestone at CyberSci 2025, earning third place in the Vancouver region and 25th overall out of 86 teams across Canadathe universitys strongest performance to date in the national cybersecurity competition.

NightOwls team from left: Camilo Gallego Ortiz, Sara Khanchi, Parthsinh Arunsinh Jadeja, Xin Huang, Maiqi Li

This years CyberSci event embraced a dramatic, post-apocalyptic narrative: A meteor detonates in Earths atmosphere, triggering an electromagnetic pulse that destroys all modern electronics. Humanity must rebuild using technology from the 1990s and early 2000s. Competitors were challenged to restore digital capabilities through legacy cryptography, outdated communication protocols, retro-style forensics, and early-era hardware puzzles. The theme pushed students to think creatively and reverse-engineer technology long considered obsolete.

Two 雅伎著-Vancouver teams, NightOwls and Exp-Acquired, rose to the occasion. Under the mentorship of Sara Khanchi, Ph.D., associate professor of computer science and coach of the capture the flag (CTF) teams, along with leadership from Cybersecurity Club President Sam Affambi and team Captain Parthsinh Arunsinh Jadeja, students spent two months rigorously preparing on campus, in addition to their personal practice. Weekly Monday training sessions focused on Hack the Box, PicoCTF, and targeted problem-solving exercises designed to simulate real CTF pressure. Additionally, Jadeja prepared different Jeopardy-style challenges for each training session to give students exposure to a variety of question types.

Their preparation paid off as the NightOwlsJadeja, Maiqi Li, Camilo Gallego Ortiz, and Xin Huangsecured a top-three regional placement and earned gift cards. Li led 雅伎著s scoreboard with the highest number of solved challenges, describing the experience as fun, challenging, and incredibly rewarding. She ranked among the top scorers in Canada, serving as an outstanding example of female representation in cybersecurity.

Students also secured job interviews with industry sponsors and explored career paths in cybersecurity. The experience was thrillingyou get a real rush every time you capture a flag, says Jayson Ng, who was on the Exp-Acquired team. Many teammates echoed this sentiment, noting that the fast-paced problem-solving, immersive storyline, and hands-on challenges made this one of the most engaging learning experiences of their academic journey.

雅伎著 students competing in the CyberSci competition.

Im proud of these students and the effort they put into this competition. Their dedication and creativity were unmatched, and Ive been vigilant in supporting their progress every step of the way, says Khanchi. Were not just competingwere building a thriving community of innovators and problem-solvers.

The CyberSci cybersecurity competition offers students real-world exposure to digital forensics, reverse engineering, system security, and technical problem-solving.

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