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medium severity May 30, 2026 · 64K affected

Atlas Menu Data Breach (2026)

In May 2026, the GTA V and CS2 cheat service Atlas Menu suffered a data breach. An attacker claimed to have gained access to all Atlas systems and published the service's database to a public GitHub repository. The incident exposed 64k unique email addresses along with usernames, IP addresses, support tickets and passwords stored as bcrypt hashes.

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Severity Medium
Disclosed May 30, 2026
Affected 64K
Data exposed Email addressesIP addressesPasswordsSupport ticketsUsernames

On May 30, 2026, the operator of Atlas Menu, a cheat service for GTA V and CS2, publicly posted the company’s entire customer database to a GitHub repository after claiming full access to all its systems. The leak exposed records for approximately 64,000 users, including email addresses, usernames, IP addresses, support tickets, and passwords stored as bcrypt hashes.

Confirmed Facts from Reporting

Public reporting indicates the attacker gained access to Atlas Menu’s backend infrastructure and extracted the full user database. The data was then uploaded to a public GitHub repository, making it freely downloadable by anyone. Industry research from sources such as DoxxScan™ continuous monitoring confirms the breach includes 64k unique email addresses, usernames, IP addresses, support tickets, and bcrypt-hashed passwords. No evidence has surfaced that the bcrypt hashes were cracked at the time of the initial publication, but the presence of plaintext emails, usernames, and IP addresses still creates immediate risks.

Why This Matters for You and Your Family

If you or anyone in your household ever used Atlas Menu, your email address, username, and IP address are now public. That combination allows others to link your gaming activity to your real-world identity. Support tickets may contain additional personal details you shared while seeking help. Even though the passwords were hashed with bcrypt, any reuse of those same passwords on other sites puts your email accounts, banking apps, and family-shared logins at risk. Children who used the service with a parent’s email or card could find their gaming usernames tied back to the family home address through the exposed IP data.

The Doxxing and Identity-Chain Risks

Once an attacker has your email, username, and IP from this breach, they can pivot to other platforms where you or your children use similar handles. This creates an identity chain: a leaked gaming username leads to a Discord account, which leads to a linked social-media profile, which reveals your city, school, or workplace. Public reporting shows these chains frequently end in doxxing, swatting, or targeted harassment. Credential leaks like this one routinely cascade into account takeovers on Steam, Epic, Roblox, and other gaming services that share email addresses or recovery phone numbers.

What to Do

  • Run a DoxxScan to map every link between your handles, emails, phone numbers, and real identity, with no-subscription cleanup handled by the service.
  • Rotate the password you used at Atlas Menu anywhere else it is reused and enable 2FA through an authenticator app instead of SMS.
  • Enable continuous DoxxScan monitoring across 15.4B+ breach records and 100+ platforms so the next exposure of your data is caught in hours, not months.
  • Cover the household with DoxxScan family coverage that extends to dependents and children’s gaming accounts that chain back to the same address or email.
  • Let the remediation specialists perform hands-on takedown requests across data brokers and exposed records on your behalf.

The incident shows how quickly a single gaming-related breach can expose your family to long-term identity risks. Start your DoxxScan trial today for continuous monitoring across 15.4B+ breach records and 100+ platforms, AI-powered identity-chain mapping, hands-on remediation by specialists, and full household coverage that includes children’s gaming accounts. DoxxScan by GalaxyWarden is also effective for protecting gaming accounts because credential leaks like this one routinely cascade into account takeovers and doxxing chains.

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