Nintendo of America has officially rejected a 2 million ransom demand from a hacking group known as ShadowByt3, following a data breach that targeted a third-party vendor. The cybercriminals claimed to have infiltrated the systems of TINYpulse, a platform utilized by Nintendo to conduct internal employee feedback and workplace surveys. According to reports, the attackers managed to extract nearly one gigabyte of data and threatened to leak the information publicly if the monetary demand was not met.
The compromised dataset allegedly spans a decade of internal communications, covering information generated between 2016 and 2026. ShadowByt3$ asserted that the stolen files contained sensitive corporate materials, including employee names, email addresses, completed surveys, analytics reports, W-9 forms, and various bank statement documents. The hackers originally set a strict compliance deadline, demanding that the Japanese gaming giant deliver the multi-million dollar payment to safeguard the information.
Nintendo of America quickly moved to address the situation, issuing a formal response to clarify the scope of the breach and calm escalating concerns among its workforce and consumer base. Corporate representatives confirmed that the company is actively investigating the incident alongside TINYpulse management. Crucially, Nintendo emphasized that its own proprietary network infrastructure was never compromised during the attack, reassuring the public that the breach was strictly confined to the external vendor.
Furthermore, Nintendo stated that no consumer data or personal financial information was accessed during the incident, as the affected repository was entirely limited to historical employee feedback and internal surveys. Given the historical reluctance of the company to capitulate to extortion, industry observers expected Nintendo to ignore the financial demands. This latest incident highlights an ongoing security challenge for major gaming publishers, which remain high-profile targets for sophisticated digital extortion campaigns.
Source: Nintendo Life