Here’s the latest on GTA 6 hacks, based on publicly reported events up to now.
- The GTA 6 leak from 2022 remains the most notable incident: a network intrusion led to unauthorized access, with early gameplay videos and even some development material widely circulated. Rockstar confirmed the breach and stressed it wouldn’t delay launches or disrupt live services.[1][2]
- In the years since, there have been periodic resurfacing claims that fragments of GTA 6 source code or additional materials are circulating online, often tied to the original breach or to subsequent security discussions, but verification of new, authentic material has been inconsistent.[4][5]
- Commercial assessments and official statements emphasize that while the breach was serious for internal security, Rockstar’s development of GTA 6 continued, and there were no publicly announced delays attributed to the incident at the time of the breach.[2]
Illustration: timeline of major GTA 6 hack events
- 2022: Rockstar confirms a network intrusion with leaked early gameplay and assets.[2]
- 2022: Initial reporting and coverage by outlets like PCMag and Bloomberg corroborate the leak and its non-impact on live services.[2]
- 2026: Survivor reports surface about potential circulating code fragments, but verification is uncertain and not officially confirmed by Rockstar.[4]
What this means for players in Montréal or elsewhere
- No confirmed GTA 6 release delays have been announced due to the hack, so expect the standard rollout updates from Rockstar Take-Two when they occur.[2]
- If you’re monitoring for authenticity, rely on official Rockstar/Take-Two statements or well-sourced reporting from established outlets; many social posts or videos circulating the web are speculative or unverified.[2]
If you’d like, I can pull the most recent official statements and summarize them with direct quotes and dates for precise citation.