shield Other

SCROLL Exploit: Other Incident Explained (2024)

On May 2024, SCROLL suffered a other on Scroll — the first of 188 documented other incidents in our archive where the loss figure was not publicly disclosed but the exploit pattern is documented below.

Attack Mechanics: How the SCROLL Other Played Out

Exploit Class Applied to SCROLL

The SCROLL incident on May 29, 2024 is classified as a Other. A specific exploit class outside the most common buckets. In the full archive, SCROLL is 1 of 188 documented other incidents.

SCROLL in Context

The SCROLL incident joins a class whose largest loss to date is MIMSpell (2024) at $65M.

Prior Other Before SCROLL

The nearest other incident before SCROLL was RedKeysCoin, 2 days earlier on May 27, 2024 ($12K lost). The same exploit class surfaced again within the other attack surface.

SCROLL Vulnerability Signature

The primary source categorises the SCROLL exploit specifically as “Integer Underflow”. This narrower label is entity-specific: it reflects how the SCROLL contract failed, rather than the broad other pattern alone.

Target Chain: Scroll

The vulnerable SCROLL contract was deployed on Scroll. This determines the block cadence, mempool, and forensic tooling available to investigators.

Impact & Recovery for SCROLL

SCROLL Loss Figure

The loss figure for SCROLL is not publicly disclosed. The primary source reports the exploit in non-USD terms, so no USD estimate is published here. For reference, the average loss across 188 other incidents in our archive is $2.03M.

Timeline Since the SCROLL Incident

The SCROLL exploit occurred 1.9 years ago (685 days). The contract, its fork-block, and the attack transaction remain on-chain and forensically reproducible.

FAQ

How much did SCROLL lose?

The SCROLL loss figure is not publicly disclosed. The primary source reports the exploit in non-USD token terms, so no USD estimate is published here.

When did the SCROLL hack happen?

The SCROLL exploit was recorded on May 29, 2024 — 685 days ago.

What type of exploit hit SCROLL?

The SCROLL incident is classified as a Other. A specific exploit class outside the most common buckets.

Which blockchain was SCROLL deployed on?

The SCROLL contract was deployed on Scroll, one of 1 documented incidents on that chain.

How does SCROLL compare to the largest Other attack?

The largest other incident in our archive is MIMSpell (2024) at $65M. The SCROLL loss was not publicly disclosed.

Which countries are analyzed in the study?

Italy and Germany.

What role does the Akaike Information Criterion (AIC) play in the analysis?

AIC helps in model selection by estimating the relative quality of statistical models for a given set of data.