Well according to the OP he has access to massive amounts of computing power:
Hello guys,
I wanna team up with people wo believes in team work than goin solo in here to solve at least 2 puzzles, you write the code and i have resource to run i have 16 tesla A100 gpus with it we can scan unto 23 TKey/s i'm not a great programmer but i have resources like Steve jobs always said what a team can achieve an individual cannot achieve. i look forward to making a team a great one
So he found an old wallet while working on one of the bitcoin puzzles that are posted.
I think we are missing something.
-Dave
you are right i still have access to it, its an aws instance i do 3d modelling for a living so i require such configurations but the dat file i found it on my google drive a couple of days ago tried importing it in a bitcore wallet it asks for password even to generate a new receiving address
I think you're missing Dave's point: I believe he finds your story suspiciously reminiscent of the many, many newbies who come here claiming to have found an old wallet, on an old hard drive from an old laptop that got clogged with semen and stopped working sometime in 2007, or 2008. And has 10K bitcoin on it. Frequently these newbies offer very generous rewards for help cracking the password. The thought occurred to me, too. The only thing that doesn't fit the pattern is the "modest" 9
BTC, so maybe you're not a schmuck who found a fake wallet on the internet and thinks he just struck it rich.
If you are being honest; as others have mentioned, btcrecover is your best bet. Especially if you have a desktop with a pair of fast GPUs and you can remember part of the password. If you don't have a fast desktop with a pair of fast GPUs, buy one. It'll cost much less than the $130k reward.