The correct answer is B. Next Generation Full Protection . Check Point’s documented security subscription package families include NGFW , NGTP , and SNBT/SandBlast . Check Point’s 3600 Security Gateway datasheet explicitly lists NGFW , NGTP , and SNBT (SandBlast) as all-inclusive security package columns. The Network Security Software Bundles datasheet also presents the same package structure: NGFW as the base Next Generation Firewall bundle, NGTP as the Next-Gen Threat Prevention package, and SNBT as the SandBlast package that includes NGTP and adds zero-day protection capabilities.
Therefore, Next Generation Firewall , Next Generation Threat Prevention , and SandBlast are valid Check Point blade bundle names in this context. Next Generation Full Protection is not the documented bundle name. It may sound plausible because it describes a comprehensive security posture, but certification questions require exact product and package terminology. In Check Point licensing and subscription design, using the correct bundle name matters because each package maps to a defined set of Software Blades and subscription entitlements. NGFW provides the base firewall/IPS access-control package, NGTP adds known-threat prevention, and SNBT adds advanced SandBlast zero-day protections such as Threat Emulation, Threat Extraction, and Zero Phishing. Reference topics: Check Point Software Blade bundles, NGFW, NGTP, SNBT/SandBlast, package entitlement mapping.