Stalker 2 reportedly target of Russian disinformation campaign claiming it's used to draft players into Ukraine war

Stalker 2: Heart of Chornobyl is reportedly being targeted by a Russian disinformation campaign falsely claiming the post-apocalyptic shooter scans players’ computers in order to help the Ukranian government “locate citizens suitable for mobilisation”.

As reported by 404 Media, the claims have been made in a one-minute video – stamped with a fake Wired watermark, but in reality unconnected to the publication – that’s being circulated on social media sites including Telegram and sent directly to journalists’ inboxes.

The video falsely asserts “an embedded program was discovered in [Stalker 2]’s code that collects player data and transmits it to [developer GSC Game World]’s servers”. It’s claimed this data – said to include the device name, IP address, and the current location of the player – is “transmitted every second” without the user’s knowledge and handed to the Ukranian government, because GSC “made a deal with the state” in order to secure funding for Stalker 2. “It’s better to play using a VPN or boycott this game for your own safety”, the video concludes.

404 Media says the video bears the hallmarks of an ongoing Russian disinformation campaign, previously dubbed Operation Matryoshka, intended to flood social media and journalists’ inboxes with “false stories that usually paint NATO countries and Ukraine in a bad light, waste reporters’ time, and make people distrust news outlets more broadly.” Eurogamer has contacted GSC for comment on the video currently being circulated.