Atlas Menu, a paid cheat service for GTA V and Counter-Strike 2, was hacked in May 2026. According to the breach notification service Have I Been Pwned, the incident affected 63,926 user accounts. An attacker claimed to have gained access to all Atlas systems and posted the stolen database to a public GitHub repository. The platform is currently offline and has made no public statement about the breach.
The exposed data includes email addresses, usernames, IP addresses, support ticket contents and passwords stored as bcrypt hashes. Bcrypt is a relatively strong hashing method, meaning passwords are not stored in plain text, but they are still vulnerable to cracking over time, particularly if users choose weak passwords. The attacker’s motivation appears to have been revenge rather than financial gain, with the breach seemingly carried out to expose the service rather than sell the data.
The irony is hard to miss. Atlas Menu marketed itself on its official website claiming “secure authentication and enhanced privacy through our advanced encryption techniques.” The website is down at the time of writing.
Atlas Menu offered features including invisibility, a super jump and the ability to fly through the GTA V map with pricing tiers for different levels of access. Cheat services for online games like GTA V have grown into a significant grey-market industry, with many players paying for tools that give them an advantage over others. Rockstar has long tried to crack down on such services, but demand has remained steady.
For anyone who had an account with Atlas Menu, the steps are straightforward. Change the password on the email address you used to sign up. If you reused that password anywhere else, including other gaming platforms, social accounts or anything else, change those too. Given that the platform is silent and offline, there is no indication that affected users will receive any official notification.