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Just noticed something that should probably worry Take-Two Interactive more than they're letting on. Rockstar Games got hit again this week by ShinyHunters, and honestly, the pattern here is starting to look less like random attacks and more like a recurring vulnerability.
For those who don't remember, this isn't even Rockstar's first rodeo with teenage hackers. Back in 2022, Arion Kurtaj - a kid who was part of the Lapsus$ group - managed to break into their Slack and dump 90 minutes of early GTA VI footage. Kurtaj was only a teenager when he pulled that off. Now he's facing an indefinite hospital order, but the damage was already done. Rockstar ended up spending $5 million and thousands of employee hours just to recover from that single breach.
Now fast forward to this week. ShinyHunters compromised Anodot's servers (a third-party monitoring company) and used stolen authentication tokens to access Rockstar's data. The deadline they set was April 14 - which already passed. They're threatening to leak files and cause "annoying digital problems." Classic extortion playbook.
What's interesting is what actually leaked. The files on the dark web mostly contain user spending data, not game details. Rockstar's playing it cool, saying it was just "non-material company information" with no impact on players or operations. Stock took a hit during pre-market (down 6%) but recovered. They're not paying the ransom either.
But here's the thing - GTA VI is massive. We're talking $2 billion in development costs over nearly a decade. It launches November 19 this year. Take-Two just reported strong Q3 numbers in February - net bookings hit $1.76 billion, up 28%. They're projecting record bookings for fiscal 2027 when GTA VI actually releases. Wall Street is watching this closely.
The real question isn't about this particular breach. It's about whether teenage hackers like Arion Kurtaj showed other groups how vulnerable Rockstar actually is. ShinyHunters is reportedly connected to a network of English-speaking hackers aged 16 to 25. These aren't sophisticated nation-state actors - they're kids who figured out how to get in. That's arguably more concerning because it means the barrier to entry is lower than it should be.
Rockstar fired over 30 employees recently for allegedly sharing confidential info, but the real security problem seems deeper. If teenage hackers can keep finding ways in, that's a systemic issue, not just a personnel problem. And with GTA VI about to launch and Take-Two's entire fiscal 2027 projection banking on it, you'd think security would be getting more investment, not less.
The next earnings call is May 15. Curious to see if they address this pattern or just keep downplaying it.