Remember the "bridge leak" that went viral in early March? The grainy 40-second clip supposedly showing a Vice City bridge from a 2020 development build? It was all fake.
The creator, known as tenshi, has released a YouTube video titled "I Tricked the Internet with a Fake GTA 6 Leak (Sorry Rockstar)" — and the story behind it is almost as interesting as the hoax itself.
How He Did It
The project took several months of work:
The attention to detail was remarkable. The clip fooled major gaming outlets, content creators, and thousands of fans.
Why He Did It
Tenshi explained that Rockstar's information drought — two trailers and almost nothing else in over two years — left the community desperate for any new content. He wanted to see if he could "create a believable-looking scene from GTA 6 by recreating everything from the ground up."
His stated goal was never to scam anyone permanently, but to spark discussion and test whether the community could spot a well-made fake.
How It Was Caught
Sharp-eyed fans from the GTA VI community mapping project eventually spotted the deception. The island and bridge layouts in the clip didn't match the carefully reconstructed map that the community has been building from official trailer footage.
Other red flags identified after the confession:
Community Reaction
Reactions have been mixed:
"Honestly, respect for the effort. That took real skill." — Reddit
"This is exactly why you can't trust anything until Rockstar posts it themselves." — Twitter
"I'm not even mad. The information drought is the real problem." — GTAForums
The Lesson
With GTA VI's launch still 8 months away and Rockstar maintaining its characteristic silence, more fake leaks are inevitable. The bridge hoax demonstrated that modern tools make it increasingly easy to create convincing fakes — and increasingly hard for fans to verify authenticity.
Rule of thumb: If it's not on Rockstar Newswire, treat it as unverified.