
Rockstar Games has confirmed it was affected by a “third-party data breach” after a well-known hacking group claimed to have infiltrated the game maker’s cloud servers and threatened to leak stolen data.
The group, ShinyHunters, posted a message on its own site warning Rockstar to “pay or leak,” according to reports. The intrusion was first spotted by security-focused outlets Hackread and Cybersec Guru.
ShinyHunters, which has previously been linked to data breaches involving companies such as Microsoft, Google and Ticketmaster, has not publicly detailed what kind of Rockstar information it says it accessed. The group instead set a deadline, stating Rockstar had until April 14 to get in touch or face a leak of data that it claimed would cause “several annoying (digital) problems.”
Rockstar, for its part, downplayed the impact in a statement to Kotaku. The company said that “a limited amount of non-material company information was accessed in connection with a third-party data breach,” and added that the incident had “no impact on our organization or our players.” The third party involved has not been named, and Rockstar has not provided additional technical details.
At this stage, there is no public confirmation of what data, if any, was taken beyond Rockstar’s description of it as non-material company information, and ShinyHunters has not released sample files to substantiate its claims.
This is not the first time Rockstar has faced a serious security incident. In 2022, the company was hit by a major hack that resulted in a substantial leak of Grand Theft Auto VI material, including gameplay footage and development assets. That earlier breach drew widespread attention across the games industry.
Following the 2022 incident, one 18-year-old member of the Lapsus$ group involved in the GTA VI leak was sentenced to an “indefinite hospitalization.” That case underscored both the scale of interest in Rockstar’s in-development titles and the legal consequences for those found responsible for breaking into game studios’ systems.
The latest ShinyHunters claim again underlines how prominent entertainment and gaming companies remain prime targets for hacking crews seeking ransom or notoriety. However, based on Rockstar’s current statement, the company maintains that this breach is limited in scope and does not affect player data or game operations.
Discover more from TechBooky
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.







