Riot Games maintains a rigorous through platforms like HackerOne, offering up to $100,000 for "vanguard-level" vulnerabilities [19, 20]. This incentivizes white-hat hackers to report flaws rather than leaking or selling source-level secrets on the black market [20].
Discover bugs in the game’s memory management that can be used to inject code without triggering traditional detection [12, 13].
In January 2023, Riot Games fell victim to a social engineering attack that resulted in the theft of source code for League of Legends , Teamfight Tactics , and a "legacy anti-cheat platform" [2, 8]. While Valorant’s primary live source code was not the main target, the breach raised massive concerns regarding the potential for future exploits [9].
Despite various claims on GitHub or hacking forums, the genuine, up-to-date is not publicly available [15]. Most files labeled as such are usually:
Following the theft, the attackers attempted to ransom the data back to Riot for $10 million, a demand Riot publicly refused to meet [8, 10]. Parts of the stolen code were eventually circulated on underground forums, prompting Riot to deploy emergency patches to harden game systems against potential new cheats [2, 8]. Security Implications: The Cheat Developer’s "Holy Grail"
Riot Games maintains a rigorous through platforms like HackerOne, offering up to $100,000 for "vanguard-level" vulnerabilities [19, 20]. This incentivizes white-hat hackers to report flaws rather than leaking or selling source-level secrets on the black market [20].
Discover bugs in the game’s memory management that can be used to inject code without triggering traditional detection [12, 13]. Valorant Internal Source Code
In January 2023, Riot Games fell victim to a social engineering attack that resulted in the theft of source code for League of Legends , Teamfight Tactics , and a "legacy anti-cheat platform" [2, 8]. While Valorant’s primary live source code was not the main target, the breach raised massive concerns regarding the potential for future exploits [9]. Riot Games maintains a rigorous through platforms like
Despite various claims on GitHub or hacking forums, the genuine, up-to-date is not publicly available [15]. Most files labeled as such are usually: In January 2023, Riot Games fell victim to
Following the theft, the attackers attempted to ransom the data back to Riot for $10 million, a demand Riot publicly refused to meet [8, 10]. Parts of the stolen code were eventually circulated on underground forums, prompting Riot to deploy emergency patches to harden game systems against potential new cheats [2, 8]. Security Implications: The Cheat Developer’s "Holy Grail"