The developer behind Cyberpunk 2077 suffered a hack.
CD Projekt Red
CD Projekt Red, developed of Cyberpunk 2077, revealed Tuesday its network was hacked and shared a ransom note left by the hackers on Twitter. The attackers claimed to have got hold of source code for Cyberpunk, The Witcher 3, an “unreleased version of Witcher 3” and spinoff card game Gwent.
The hackers threatened to release the games’ source code, along with documents from the Polish game studio’s accounting, legal and other departments if they don’t “come to an agreement.” It appears the hackers weren’t kidding.
An auction appears on a hacker forum for the source code of one of CD Projekt’s card game, Gwent according to The Verge Thursday. The thieves are looking for $1 million as a starting bid or $7 million to buy it outright. Cybersecurity firm Kela believe the auction is legit.
Update: a mistake was made. They stated starting bid $1kk. This was assumed as a typo for $1,000. They meant $1,000,000. They are also selling immediately for $7,000,000.
Attached images supplied by @DrFurfagMD pic.twitter.com/JnOcwnGqZk
— vx-underground (@vxunderground) February 10, 2021
CD Projekt doesn’t think any personal data of players or users of its services has been compromised, and said it won’t give in to the hackers’ demands or negotiate with them.
The ransom note alluded to Cyberpunk’s rocky launch in December. Console versions of CD Project’s massively hyped sci-fi game were beset with performance issues and bugs, even on the next-gen PS5 and Xbox Series X.
The game studio recommended former employees enable fraud alerts for their personal information, but it had no evidence that those details were accessed by the hackers, according to a tweet Tuesday afternoon.
To our ex employees: As of this moment, we don’t possess evidence that any of your personal data was accessed. However, we still recommend caution (i.e. enabling fraud alerts). If you have questions, please write to our Privacy Team dpo[at]https://t.co/0UUMoqT5tF
— CD PROJEKT RED (@CDPROJEKTRED) February 9, 2021
Sony and Microsoft both removed Cyberpunk from their digital stores and offered refunds to unhappy customers after widespread reports that the game was nearly unplayable on base PS4 and Xbox One hardware (the original 2013 versions of the consoles).
The developer’s co-founder ultimately acknowledged in an apology video that the console version of its game “did not meet the quality standard we wanted it to meet” and outlined its plans for fixing the problems through patches.
Be the first to comment