Arc Raiders accused of logging private Discord chats in privacy scare
Arc Raiders has found itself in the center of a data privacy storm after reports surfaced that the game’s client was logging private Discord messages in plaintext. The issue, which affects players who linked their accounts to the extraction shooter, has raised significant concerns regarding how invasive integration tools can be when left unchecked by developers.
The vulnerability was first detailed by Timothy Meadows, whose technical analysis revealed that gameplay logs stored in the local AppData folder contained unfiltered Direct Messages and a full Discord Bearer authentication token. According to the report, the game’s Discord SDK was running in a verbose mode that indiscriminately captured chat data between users. While the files were stored locally, the presence of a full authentication token represents a significant security lapse, risking exposure if those logs were shared in crash reports. As noted by GamingOnLinux, the oversight highlights how easily private data can spill over when services handshake without rigorous filters.
Developed by Embark Studios, Arc Raiders has been navigating a lengthy early access period since October 2025. The extraction shooter was already facing community skepticism over its implementation of AI features, and this technical gaffe—accidental as it appears to be—adds a concrete security worry to the list. It sits comfortably alongside other recent industry trust controversies, where the transparency of major studios is increasingly under the microscope.
Embark Studios acted quickly to patch the vulnerability. In a statement to their community, the team confirmed a hotfix had been deployed to disable the excessive logging, stating that “private and/or personal data was not sent outside your machine and Embark has not (and will not) review or keep such information.” The developer has promised a deeper audit of their systems, seemingly unrelated to recent industry pushes to eliminate what’s failing in consumer trust, but vital nonetheless. VideoGamer has contacted Embark Studios for further comment on the audit’s scope.