Atlas Menu Data Breach Exposes 64,000 GTA V and CS2 Cheat Service Users
Atlas Menu cheat service suffers data breach exposing 64,000 GTA V and CS2 users' credentials
Summary
Atlas Menu, a cheat service for Grand Theft Auto V and Counter-Strike 2, was breached in May 2026, exposing 64,000 user accounts including emails, IP addresses, usernames, support tickets, and bcrypt-hashed passwords. The stolen database was published on GitHub by an anonymous hacker claiming retaliation against a suspected scammer. Affected users face risks from phishing, social engineering, credential stuffing, and doxing attacks within the gaming community.
Full text
Data BreachesAtlas Menu Data Breach Exposes 64,000 GTA V and CS2 Cheat Service Users Atlas Menu Data Breach exposes 64,000 GTA V and CS2 cheat service users, leaking emails, IPs, support tickets and hashed passwords. byDeeba AhmedJune 5, 20262 minute read Atlas Menu, a widely used cheat service for Grand Theft Auto V and Counter-Strike 2, was hacked during May 2026, and reportedly, hackers managed to sneak into the company’s private computer servers and steal a massive file full of customer records. The data breach was confirmed and verified on June 2, 2026, by the cybersecurity firm UpGuard and the tracking site Have I Been Pwned, a free public website people use to check if their personal logins are safe. The Atlas Menu website (atlasmenu.net) went down following the incident, while there’s no official response from its owners as yet. There’s no doubt that this is an embarrassing security failure for the company because on its official website, it heavily promotes secure authentication, enhanced privacy, and advanced encryption techniques as its core competencies. What Data Was Stolen? The hackers exfiltrated a database containing roughly 64,000 user accounts, containing crucial details like usernames, email addresses, IP addresses, and customer support ticket data. They also took user passwords, which were encrypted using a cryptographic tool called a bcrypt hash that turns the plain text into random characters, but this protection isn’t foolproof. Hackers can still crack the scrambled text by using brute-force methods in which high-powered computers are used to rapidly guess millions of combinations until a match is found. The anonymous hacker published the stolen database online using a public GitHub repository. The post also had a message revealing that this intrusion was retaliation against an individual they accused of being a scammer. The risk for gamers In its report, UpGuard classified the severity of the attack as medium. The primary threat for affected users is targeted social engineering and phishing campaigns because, with stolen support ticket histories in hand, scammers can easily create highly personalised, deceptive emails. And, the data can be used for doxing within the gaming community or to launch credential stuffing attacks if the same passwords have been reused by users across multiple platforms. For now, the best defence for anyone who used Atlas Menu is to immediately change their login details and turn on multi-factor authentication. Deeba Ahmed Deeba is a veteran cybersecurity reporter at Hackread.com with over a decade of experience covering cybercrime, vulnerabilities, and security events. Her expertise and in-depth analysis make her a key contributor to the platform’s trusted coverage. View Posts Atlas MenuCounter StrikeCyber AttackCybersecuritydata breachGrand Theft AutoGTA VPrivacy Leave a Reply Cancel reply View Comments (0) Related Posts Read More Data Breaches Crypto Cyber Crime Security Grinex crypto exchange shuts down, blames Western agencies for $13.7M breach Grinex exchange collapses after $13.7M breach, blames Western spies as Chainalysis flags possible exit scam and sanctions evasion network links claims. byDeeba Ahmed Read More Data Breaches Grafana Says It Rejected Ransom Demand After Source Code Theft Grafana says hackers stole its source code after accessing a GitHub token, but no customer data or systems were affected. byWaqas Read More Data Breaches Security OVHcloud Founder Denies Massive 590TB Data Breach Claims OVHcloud denies breach after hacker claims 600TB data theft affecting millions of sites, with experts doubting authenticity due to weak proof byDeeba Ahmed Read More Security Data Breaches Hacking News Hacker Leaks Thousands of Microsoft and Nokia Employee Details Hacker “888” leaks personal data of Nokia and Microsoft employees on Breach Forums. Data breaches at third-party contractors… byWaqas
Indicators of Compromise
- domain — atlasmenu.net
- domain — github.com