Deepengine

Deepengine

Deepengine is an affordable, user-friendly cybersecurity platform that unifies attack surface management, continuous vulnerability scanning, automated penetration testing, and real-time network monito

Deepengine screenshot

What is Deepengine?

Deepengine is a cybersecurity platform designed to help organisations find and fix security vulnerabilities across their entire digital footprint. It combines several security functions into one tool: it maps your attack surface (identifying all publicly exposed assets), scans continuously for known vulnerabilities, runs automated penetration tests, and monitors your network in real time. The platform covers common vulnerabilities across public IPs, subnets, APIs, web applications, cloud services, mobile apps, and internal networks. It's built for teams of any size and doesn't require deep technical expertise to get started. Deepengine starts free and uses a pay-as-you-go pricing model, so you only pay for what you scan. It integrates with Slack and Webhooks to send alerts and automate responses, and includes executive-level reporting to help with compliance requirements.

Key Features

Attack surface management

discovers and catalogues all external assets and entry points

Continuous vulnerability scanning

automatically checks for known vulnerabilities across your infrastructure

Automated penetration testing

runs simulated attacks to test security defences

Real-time network monitoring

tracks suspicious activity and potential threats

Risk prioritisation

ranks vulnerabilities by severity and exploitability so you know what to fix first

Compliance reporting

generates reports suitable for audits and regulatory requirements

Pros & Cons

Advantages

  • Free to start with no credit card required, making it accessible for small teams and startups
  • Covers many asset types including cloud, mobile, and internal networks in one platform
  • Pay-as-you-go pricing means costs scale with your usage rather than fixed licenses
  • Integrations with Slack and webhooks allow alerts to reach your existing tools automatically

Limitations

  • Free tier likely comes with limitations on scan frequency, number of assets, or depth of testing
  • Automated penetration testing may be less thorough than manual testing by security experts
  • Organisations with very large or complex networks may find broader enterprise features limited in lower tiers

Use Cases

Small to medium businesses wanting to monitor their security posture without hiring dedicated security staff

DevOps teams needing continuous visibility into vulnerabilities across cloud and containerised environments

Compliance teams preparing for audits by gathering evidence of vulnerability scanning and remediation

Development teams integrating security checks into CI/CD pipelines to catch issues early

Managed service providers offering security monitoring to multiple customers