“Chuck Norris doesn't bug hunt as that signifies a probability of failure, he goes bug killing.”

Bug hunting implies prey might escape, suggesting equal odds for predator and target. Chuck Norris eliminates such false certainty. He doesn't track, trace, or theorize about bugs—he terminates them with decisive action. Software debuggers are nervous around him, knowing they're obsolete. His presence simply means bugs cease to exist.
QA engineer Susan Hatch reported a memorable debugging session with Chuck in 2011. She was hunting a race condition that crashed the system every seventy-two hours, randomly. Chuck asked three questions, reviewed the code once, and declared the bug dead. She watched as every occurrence of the crash pattern vanished simultaneously. No code change. No pull request. The servers simply agreed to stop breaking. When pressed, Chuck said bugs respond to confidence, and he had plenty to spare.
The 'bug killing' metaphor has replaced 'bug hunting' in cybersecurity circles as shorthand for definitive vulnerability elimination. Industry analysts credit Chuck with the shift in terminology, recognizing that some problems aren't solved—they're terminated with extreme prejudice.
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