Rockstar Games confirms limited data breach after hacker ransom demand

Rockstar Games has confirmed that a third-party data breach allowed access to a limited amount of non-material company information. The incident follows claims by hacking group ShinyHunters, which demanded a ransom by April 14 or threatened to leak data stolen from Rockstar's Snowflake instances via Anodot. Rockstar stated the breach has no impact on its organization or players.

On April 11, 2026, ShinyHunters claimed on a dark web site to have compromised Rockstar Games' Snowflake servers through Anodot, a cloud monitoring service. The group issued a ransom demand, warning: “Rockstar Games, your Snowflake instances were compromised thanks to Anodot.com. Pay or leak. This is a final warning to reach out by 14 Apr 2026 before we leak, along with several annoying (digital) problems that’ll come your way. Make the right decision, don’t be the next headline.” ShinyHunters did not crack Snowflake's encryption directly but used authentication tokens obtained via Anodot, as first reported by CybersecGuru and covered by Eurogamer and Kotaku. The hackers suggested they hold financial, marketing, and corporate data, though specifics remain unconfirmed publicly and no player passwords appear compromised. Rockstar Games responded swiftly with a statement, telling IGN and Kotaku: “We can confirm that a limited amount of non-material company information was accessed in connection with a third-party data breach. This incident has no impact on our organisation or our players.” The studio emphasized the data's non-material nature and lack of effect on staff or players. This marks the second major breach for Rockstar, following a 2022 hack by teenager Arion Kurtaj, who accessed early Grand Theft Auto 6 assets via a third-party app and Slack, leading to widespread leaks. Rockstar described that incident as a network intrusion; Kurtaj was later deemed unfit to stand trial or, per other accounts, sentenced to indefinite hospital detention.

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Illustration depicting hackers leaking Rockstar Games revenue data in a cyberpunk lair, highlighting GTA Online and Red Dead Online earnings from ShinyHunters breach.
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ShinyHunters leaks Rockstar revenue data after ransom deadline

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Hacking group ShinyHunters published stolen revenue metrics from Rockstar Games on April 13, 2026, after the company ignored their ransom demand from two days prior. The data shows Grand Theft Auto Online averaging $1.3 million daily over the past six months—about $10 million weekly—versus Red Dead Online's $500,000 weekly. Rockstar, which confirmed a limited breach earlier, reiterated no impact on operations or players.

As the April 14 ransom deadline approaches, ShinyHunters has reiterated threats to release breached Rockstar Games data obtained via third-party Anodot, following the studio's confirmation of limited non-material access with no player impact. This updates coverage of the initial breach claim reported earlier this week.

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Take-Two Interactive's shares jumped over 2% on April 14, 2026, adding roughly $1 billion to its market cap, following ShinyHunters' leak of Rockstar Games' GTA Online and Red Dead Online revenue data the previous day.

Sacred Symbols podcast host Colin Moriarty briefly lost access to his PlayStation Network account despite two-factor authentication. The incident occurred after he received a warning message about an impending attack.

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The FBI has launched an investigation into malware embedded in several indie games on Steam, targeting users affected between May 2024 and January 2026. The agency is asking potential victims to come forward for possible restitution. Seven specific titles are under scrutiny.

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