Back to Radar
R2

R2Games

High

R2Games experienced a data breach in 2015, exposing over 22 million records, including hashed passwords and email addresses.

Records exposed
22,281,337 records
Breach date
Breach Nov 1, 2015
Last update
Updated Feb 9, 2016

What data was exposed?

Fields reported as compromised in this breach record.

Email addressesIP addressesPasswordsUsernames

Why does this breach matter?

In-depth analysis of the breach and its implications.

In November 2015, R2Games, an online gaming platform, suffered a breach impacting the data security of its users. The breach involved unauthorized access to the platform's vBulletin forum, leading to the exposure of over 22 million records containing sensitive user information. The compromised data included email addresses, IP addresses, usernames, and passwords stored as salted hashes, which utilized a suboptimal implementation enabling rapid cracking. Subsequent waves of disclosed records were added to security databases, highlighting the breach's scale and ongoing discovery process.

Impact Analysis

Understanding the scope and consequences of this breach.

User Impact
Exposed credentials may lead to unauthorized account access if reused across services.
Business Impact
The breach likely impacted user trust and required significant response actions to address security concerns and strengthen data protection measures.
Affected Sectors
  • Gaming
  • Entertainment
Geographic Impact
  • Global

What You Should Do

Recommended actions to take in response to this breach.

If You Were Affected

  • Change passwords for accounts using the same credentials.
  • Enable two-factor authentication on services if available.
  • Monitor email accounts for suspicious activity.

Preventive Measures

  • Avoid reusing passwords for multiple services.
  • Utilize password managers for secure password storage.
  • Ensure platforms use strong hashing algorithms and secure configurations.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about this breach and what it means for you.

The exposed data included email addresses, IP addresses, usernames, and hashed passwords obtained from the R2Games vBulletin forum system.