Few games have leaked as dramatically as Grand Theft Auto VI. In September 2022, unfinished footage surfaced online in what journalists called one of the biggest leaks in gaming history.
Since then, social media has been flooded with “new GTA 6 gameplay”, AI-generated trailers and wild rumours. Our job in this category is to separate signal from noise.
Our leak rating system
Every major GTA 6 leak we cover gets a simple verdict:
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Real – backed by official confirmation or identical to later footage
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Possible – plausible, but not yet confirmed
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Fake – clearly fabricated or contradicted by official information
This three-step system keeps things readable without pretending we have 100% certainty on day one.
How we verify GTA 6 leaks
When a leak appears, we ask:
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Source: Who posted it? Do they have a track record?
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Evidence: Are there matching assets in official trailers or screenshots?
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Technical quality: Does the footage look like Rockstar’s RAGE engine, or like a modded GTA V / other game?
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Timing: Does it line up with known development milestones and internal reports?Vikipedi
We also watch for AI artifacts – strange animations, inconsistent UI, nonsensical lighting – which strongly suggest artificially generated “gameplay”.
Why some leaks still matter
Even if early footage is stolen and unfinished, it can still reveal:
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Rough map layout and district names
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Early versions of Jason and Lucia
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Experimental features that may or may not survive to release
However, we always remind readers that leaked builds are not final. Systems and visuals can change drastically over a four-year development cycle.
What you will find in this category
Here you will see:
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Detailed breakdowns of major leaks
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Clear verdicts (Real / Possible / Fake)
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Comparisons between old leaks and new trailers
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Guides on how to spot fake GTA 6 clips yourself
If you are tired of chasing clickbait thumbnails and want calm, documented analysis, this is your safe zone.


