HomeNewsTechnologyYear Ender 2023: 2023 in Gaming, Part 2: Hacks, leaks and this year’s good, bad, and ugly games

Year Ender 2023: 2023 in Gaming, Part 2: Hacks, leaks and this year’s good, bad, and ugly games

Amidst all the doom and gloom of leaks, hacks, layoffs and legislative overreach, it was one of the better years in a while for the actual games themselves.

December 27, 2023 / 13:29 IST
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2023 in Gaming, Part 2: Hacks, leaks and this year’s good, bad and ugly games
Nearly every contemporary gaming system got at least one superb title and a handful of very good ones sprinkled across a year that truly left gamers spoiled for choice. (Representational Image)

Previously on ‘2023 in Gaming’, we looked at Microsoft’s hit-or-miss (mostly miss, mind you) year, Government of India’s attempts to come to terms with how to regulate gaming, the massive number of layoffs in the industry, and more. You can take my word for it or click right here to check it out for yourself.

If you’re upto speed, and with hours left until the new year, let’s kick off Part 2 with a look at an issue that is likely to become a far more complex problem in the years to come.

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Studio cybersecurity comes up woefully short

Among the biggest news from the world of gaming (from a cybersecurity perspective) is the life sentence handed to Arion Kurtaj — an 18-year-old from Oxford, UK, who hacked Rockstar Games last September and steal a reported 90 clips from the upcoming Grand Theft Auto VI. Perhaps the most incredible aspect of this entire story is that despite being “on bail for hacking Nvidia and BT/EE and in police protection at a Travelodge hotel, [Kurtaj] continued hacking”. Remarkably, he did so without a computer (his laptop had been confiscated) and managed to get around Rockstar’s safety measures using an Amazon Firestick, his hotel TV, and a mobile phone.