A GTA V cheat service that promised “enhanced privacy” just got hacked, exposing 64,000 accounts

Atlas Menu, which sold invisibility hacks and super jumps for Grand Theft Auto V, had its user data stolen and posted to GitHub by a hacker seeking revenge against a scammer


A GTA V cheat service that promised “enhanced privacy” just got hacked, exposing 64,000 accounts Image by: Rockstar Games

TL;DR

Atlas Menu, a GTA V cheat service that promised “enhanced privacy,” was hacked, exposing nearly 64,000 accounts including emails, usernames, hashed passwords, and IP addresses. The stolen data was posted to GitHub by a hacker motivated by revenge.

Atlas Menu, a cheat service for Grand Theft Auto V’s online mode, has been hacked, exposing the personal data of nearly 64,000 users. The stolen data included email addresses, usernames, hashed passwords, IP addresses, and support tickets, according to data breach notification service Have I Been Pwned. The breach was claimed by a hacker whose stated motivation was revenge against a scammer, and the allegedly stolen data was posted publicly to GitHub.

The irony is difficult to miss. Atlas Menu marketed itself on security, promising users “secure authentication and enhanced privacy through our advanced encryption techniques,” according to its official website, which was archived before going offline. The service sold features that gave GTA V players unfair advantages: invisibility, super jumps, the ability to fly through the map, and other modifications to Rockstar Games’ online multiplayer environment.

A multi-million dollar shadow industry

Game cheats have evolved from hobbyist projects into a multi-million dollar commercial market. Professional and semi-professional gamers pay for software that provides advantages over competitors, while casual players use cheats to bypass progression systems or grief other users. Services like Atlas Menu operated in a legal grey area, selling tools that violate most games’ terms of service but are not themselves illegal in most jurisdictions.

The breach exposes users to potential embarrassment and further security risks. Email addresses tied to gaming accounts often overlap with primary personal accounts, meaning that users who signed up for a cheat service with the same credentials they use elsewhere now face credential-stuffing attacks. The hashed passwords provide some protection, but depending on the hashing algorithm used, determined attackers could crack weaker passwords.

Atlas Menu is not the first cheat service to be breached. A popular cheat service for Counter-Strike: Global Offensive was hacked several years ago in a similar incident. The GTA franchise has been a recurring target for security incidents, from the 2023 GTA VI trailer leak traced to a Rockstar developer’s son to repeated exploits targeting GTA Online’s peer-to-peer networking architecture.

The enforcement gap

The breach highlights a structural problem in gaming security. Cheat services operate with minimal accountability: their operators are often anonymous, their infrastructure is disposable, and their users have no recourse when things go wrong. Unlike enterprise software vendors that face regulatory and contractual obligations to protect customer data, cheat service operators answer to no one.

Rockstar Games has invested heavily in anti-cheat systems for GTA Online, but the persistence of services like Atlas Menu demonstrates the limits of technical enforcement against a motivated and commercially incentivised cheating ecosystem. Law enforcement has targeted some gaming-adjacent cybercrime operations, but cheat services rarely rise to the level of criminal prosecution unless they involve direct financial fraud or intellectual property theft at scale.

The owners of Atlas Menu could not be reached for comment. The site remains offline.

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