 Hello, let me show you how I created the word document that injects shellcode, that launches calculator, so that I could test emet and windows 10. So here I have assembly code, let's open a command line, and this is shellcode that will launch calc.exe. So let's assemble this, so let's create the shellcode in a bin file, and this is the shellcode we want to assemble. And now we can use my shellcode tool to VBA to convert this shellcode, so make sure you take the bin file, not the asm file, and now we can create a VBA.txt file, okay. So this here is VBA code that contains and launches the 32-bit shellcode. So I can just put that into Word, like this. So let me copy this and put this in the VBA editor, and let me save this doc1 docfile, and let's call this calc shellcode, like this. And now if we run this shellcode, I made a typo here, sorry, so let's run this again, okay, and you can see that calculator gets launched via the shellcode, so let's save this. So this is the 32-bit version for 32-bit Word. Now if you want to create a version that supports both Word versions, so 32-bit and 64-bit, you can do the following. So I have also assembly code for 64-bit, so let's assemble this. This is the assembler code, so let's create a bin file, like this. And then with shellcode to VBA, we also convert it to VBA, but we have to tell it that we have to deal with 64-bit here, like this option. And then also, since we are going to include the same functions from 32-bit and 64-bit into the VBA, I'm going to add a prefix, sorry, to the functions x64, and now we can convert it, make sure you take the bin file, okay, VBA.txt, and now I can edit this, okay, this bin file, I can here see with pointer save that this is the 64-bit version, so let us copy this, like this, the declarations here, and we put them here in Word. So we want to test if win64, then we have this code and else we have the 32-bit declarations, like this, and then we can copy everything else here, the VBA functions for 64-bit shellcode, like this, here, and then we can just create a function, launch, sorry, launch, like this, if win64, then we launch this function, and else we launch the 32-bit version, so we can save this, and now if we execute this, so we get again the calculator, but if we do this on 64-bit Windows, no, 64-bit Word, then we also get the calculator launched via 64-bit shellcode.