On November 25, a short video purporting to show GTA 6 gameplay went viral, and for a few heady hours, some fans were convinced Rockstar had been leaked again. The clip shows Lucia walking through a rainy, neon-soaked Vice City while NPCs dodge puddles and umbrellas bob in the wind. The video, shared and reposted across TikTok and X by accounts including zapactugta6 on X, has amassed more than 3 million views. It looks slick at a glance, but forensic checks and user comments quickly flagged signs it was not genuine.
🚨🚨 GTA 6 ALERT – EXTREMELY SERIOUS SITUATION 🚨🚨
A new and highly disturbing leak has just surfaced on TikTok before being taken down only minutes later — but the damage is already done. The video allegedly showed a real gameplay moment where the player is controlling Lucia,… pic.twitter.com/iSD4duGEPu
— Zap Actu GTA6 (@zapactugta6) November 25, 2025
What sold a lot of people at first were the little details. Lighting that reacts oddly to the character, crowd animation that repeats in short loops, NPCs that clip into geometry in ways a finished Rockstar build probably would not. Those same quirks are exactly what modern AI video tools make easy to fake. Investigators and a number of creators who reverse engineer synthetic clips now believe the footage was produced using AI video generators, with Veo 3 named as an example of software capable of producing similar scenes. Users on social feeds called out identical artifacts across different uploads and noted uncanny similarities to other known AI generated clips.
That does not mean the community is not hungry for real GTA 6 material. Recent reporting even says GTA 6 is essentially “complete” and Rockstar is using extra time to polish the build for a November 19, 2026 release after pushing the game back from May. At the same time Rockstar has been vigilant about leaks, and the company recently said staff dismissals were tied to the distribution of confidential information rather than union activity. Readers can find more context in the Rockstar statement on recent firings here. The short answer is that training models can now replicate game-like visuals and motion in seconds. Throw in an actor model that resembles a known character, add rain, slap on some post processing and suddenly a clip looks plausible in a social feed. People want the leaks to be real. That desire makes critical thinking optional and shares explode.
For fans trying to separate the wheat from the chaff there are a few practical checks. Look for repeating NPC movement and identical background cycles. Watch for odd reflections or shadows that do not match the rest of the scene. And treat minute long vertical clips posted anonymously with skepticism. GTA related leaks have turned up before. The community has seen footage that was genuinely stolen and footage that was misattributed. Until Rockstar releases official material like a new trailer or developer footage these viral clips should be treated as unverified, and often they are just AI stunts designed to get attention.
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Grand Theft Auto VI
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