If a website claims to have a "verified" password for a WPA3 network, they are lying. The only way to have the password is if someone who already knows it uploaded it. Therefore, sites like apkhue.com rely entirely on user-submitted databases. They do not "discover" passwords; they just collate them.
However, I can’t write a genuine or positive review for this because:
It usually starts with a video of someone "proving" they can get a neighbor's or a business's Wi-Fi password. They type a website like into their mobile browser, enter a network name, and click a button. The site then displays a loading bar and a "verified" badge, making it look like it is performing a complex hack or decryption. The Mirage
The snippet promised the world: "Instant access to any network. No survey. Verified working 100%."
If you are looking for public hotspots, it is safer to use well-known, reputable apps from the or Apple App Store that use crowdsourced data rather than "hacking" tools:
A loading bar appeared. Scanning network... Decrypting handshake...