If you are testing a router in a non-English speaking country, an English-centric "probable" list will fail.
High-quality lists are curated based on real breach data. The probable.txt list from Daniel Miessler’s SecLists project is roughly 4GB and contains passwords sorted by probability (most common first). If your version of probable.txt is only 50MB, you are using an outdated, truncated version. wordlistprobabletxt did not contain password high quality
If probable.txt didn't contain the password, follow these steps: Switch to rockyou.txt . Download the latest from GitHub. Run a rule-based attack to mutate existing words. If you are testing a router in a
This is the most effective method against "high quality" passwords. you are using an outdated
Always use rules to mutate your "probable" lists into something more modern.