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'Move-to-Earn' Game Stepn Hit With DDOS Attacks—Again

source-logo  decrypt.co  + 4 more 05 June 2022 19:55, UTC

Popular crypto game Stepn was hit with a number of distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks this weekend, the third such occurrence in as many months.

According to the app’s Twitter page, devs of the platform were still working to fix the issue at the time of this writing.

“We have been under multiple DDOS attacks in the past hours,” those behind the game said in a tweet on Sunday. “Securing the servers and recovery may take anywhere from 1 to 12 hours.”

1/2
We have been under multiple DDOS attacks in the past hours. Securing the servers and recovery may take anywhere from 1 to 12 hours. We recommend you take some rest during the maintenance or otherwise the work-outs may not be recorded properly.

— STEPN | Public Beta Phase IV (@Stepnofficial) June 5, 2022

Another tweet read: “We recommend you take some rest during the maintenance or otherwise the work-outs may not be recorded properly. Our engineers are working hard to fix the problems.”

And yesterday, users also were notified that the game was experiencing “network congestion” after it was hit with 25 million DDoS attacks in a short period.

A DDoS attack is when malicious actors try to bring down a website by overloading it with useless traffic. Such attacks are very common—particularly in the crypto world. 

Stepn is a “move-to-earn” app where users are rewarded for moving outdoors. Players can buy NFTs (non-fungible tokens) of different sneakers for the game and earn tokens based on the amount they run and walk. 

Stepn 'Move-to-Earn' Cryptocurrencies Plummet After App Says It Will Block Users in China

The game, which calls itself a “Web3 lifestyle app,” has two tokens—one for utility and another for governance. 

2/5. We were experiencing network issues due to a 25 million DDOS attack sent to the server within a short period of time. Due to network congestion, AI cannot receive user information and identify them as bots.

— STEPN | Public Beta Phase IV (@Stepnofficial) June 4, 2022

Hackers seem hellbent on bringing down the popular app: In April and in May, the game announced people were trying to cripple it by sending millions of DDoS attacks.

decrypt.co

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