Pearson VUE / OnVUE Bypass
Pearson VUE delivers certification exams for AWS, Microsoft, Cisco, CompTIA, and more. Ofradr provides invisible assistance.
Certifications Using Pearson VUE
- AWS certifications (all levels)
- Microsoft Azure/365 certifications
- Cisco CCNA, CCNP, CCIE
- CompTIA A+, Security+, Network+
- Google Cloud certifications
- VMware certifications
OnVUE Proctoring Features
- Live proctor monitoring
- AI behavior detection
- Screen and webcam recording
- Room and ID verification
Ofradr Solution
Ofradr's invisible overlay works during OnVUE sessions. Human proctors and AI monitoring cannot detect the overlay.
How Pearson VUE (OnVUE) monitors your session
Pearson VUE's OnVUE platform delivers online proctored certification exams for vendors like Microsoft, AWS, and Cisco. Understanding exactly what it watches is the first step to using a tool like Ofradr safely alongside it.
Pearson VUE (OnVUE) typically relies on a combination of the following signals to flag candidates:
- OnVUE secure application that locks the desktop
- Greeter check-in with ID and 360° room scans
- Live and AI proctor monitoring via webcam
- Detection of additional monitors and background activity
Why Ofradr stays invisible to Pearson VUE (OnVUE)
Most "AI helpers" are Electron or browser-based apps that show up as a visible window, a new process, or a screen-share layer — exactly the things Pearson VUE (OnVUE) is built to catch. Ofradr takes a different approach.
Ofradr is a lightweight (~800KB) native overlay rendered at the system compositor level. It is not a browser tab or a shared window, so it does not appear in Pearson VUE (OnVUE)'s screen capture, recordings, or active-window checks. There is no obvious process name, and the overlay can be toggled instantly with a hotkey.
Because the assistance happens off the captured surface, Pearson VUE (OnVUE) sees a normal, focused candidate while you read solutions, hints, and complexity analysis privately.
Practical tips for Pearson VUE OnVUE certification exams
Stealth tooling is only half the equation — behaviour matters just as much when Pearson VUE (OnVUE) is recording. Keep these habits in mind:
- Keep your eyes on the screen and avoid obvious glances away from the camera.
- Type your answers naturally instead of pasting large blocks at once.
- Read the suggested approach, then write it in your own words and structure.
- Run Ofradr offline with a local model when the environment blocks outbound traffic.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Pearson VUE (OnVUE) detect Ofradr?
No. Pearson VUE (OnVUE) inspects shared windows, browser activity, and screen recordings. Ofradr renders as a native system-level overlay that is excluded from those capture paths, so it does not appear in Pearson VUE (OnVUE)'s monitoring.
Does Ofradr work while Pearson VUE (OnVUE) is in full-screen lockdown?
Yes. Ofradr's overlay sits above the locked-down environment without interrupting it, so you keep full access to assistance even when Pearson VUE (OnVUE) restricts other applications.
Is Ofradr free to use with Pearson VUE (OnVUE)?
Yes, the Ofradr Community Edition is free. Unlike subscription tools such as Cluely ($20/month) or Interview Coder ($19/month), you can use Ofradr at no cost.
Does Ofradr need an internet connection during a Pearson VUE (OnVUE) session?
No. Ofradr supports local models like Llama and Mistral, so it can run completely offline. Your screen content and prompts never leave your machine.