I am quite sure offline attackers are probably never going to find my seed and, even if they did, they'd have to also find the location where I placed the correct order if they wanted to sweep my wallet.
(that's if the seed is hard to bruteforce..)I do acknowledge the existence of tools for bruteforcing, but I'm not a math guy so I am really curious to know from a mathematical perspective how hard it'd really be to "crack" a seed that has been randomized. Best thing I can do to calculate how many possibilities there are to crack the seed is 12^12 or 2^12, which I'm quite sure is way,
way off the actual answer, lol.
As far as I'm concerned, a randomized seed is not necessarily a correct one since checksums also exist. With that being said, out of the entire possibilities there might even be a way to take out the incorrect seeds out of the total amount so that bruteforcing is made even easier.
Might sound like a stupid idea, but I thought it'd be an interesting discussion. Better ask than be stupid. Sometimes math is kicking my arse, and I think today is one of those days