Security

Jailed Hacker Claims GTA VI Source Code Is 'Definitely Somewhere' — Could It Leak?

Arion Kurtaj, the hacker behind the 2022 GTA VI breach, obtained a phone in prison and claims the stolen source code could surface — raising fresh concerns about delays.

The specter of the 2022 GTA VI hack continues to haunt Rockstar Games. Arion Kurtaj, the teenager who infiltrated Rockstar's systems and leaked hours of development footage, has reportedly obtained a smartphone inside his UK detention facility and made alarming claims about the game's source code.

What Kurtaj Claims

In conversations that surfaced online, Kurtaj expressed surprise that the stolen GTA VI source code hasn't leaked yet, stating it's "definitely somewhere" and implying multiple people may have access to it.

This is significant because while the 2022 leak exposed gameplay footage, the source code itself was believed to be contained. If the full source code were to leak:

  • Cheat and mod tools could be developed before launch
  • Security vulnerabilities in GTA Online 2.0 could be exploited from day one
  • Competitors could study Rockstar's proprietary technology
  • Piracy could be facilitated more easily
  • Rockstar's Response

    Rockstar has not publicly commented on Kurtaj's claims. However, Take-Two Interactive (Rockstar's parent company) has reaffirmed the November 19, 2026 release date, suggesting they don't consider the source code situation a launch-blocking threat.

    The 2022 Hack: A Refresher

    In September 2022, Kurtaj (then 18) breached Rockstar's internal Slack and Confluence systems, downloading:

  • 90+ videos of GTA VI in development
  • Source code for both GTA V and GTA VI
  • Internal documents and communications
  • He leaked the footage on GTAForums, causing the biggest game leak in history. Kurtaj was later convicted and sentenced to an indefinite hospital order due to his autism diagnosis.

    Should Fans Be Worried?

    The short answer: probably not about the release date. Rockstar has had over three years to:

  • Modify critical code sections
  • Implement new security layers
  • Redesign vulnerable systems
  • Prepare anti-cheat infrastructure
  • The bigger concern is GTA Online 2.0's security at launch. If hackers have a head start analyzing the codebase, the multiplayer experience could face challenges from day one.

    What Happens Next

    Security researchers and Rockstar's legal team are likely monitoring the situation closely. Take-Two has been extremely aggressive with legal action against leakers and modders in recent years — anyone distributing source code would face severe consequences.

    For now, the November 19 date holds. But this story is far from over.