Delays have already pushed Grand Theft Auto VI further down the calendar, and the latest accounts from inside Rockstar Games suggest the schedule pressure hasn’t eased. Instead, employees describe a situation where the burden of meeting leadership’s revised timelines is falling directly on development teams, with long hours and unpaid overtime becoming routine in recent weeks.

Is crunch culture still deeply embedded at Rockstar Games despite past backlash?

A recent Glassdoor review from a QA analyst in Bengaluru, first highlighted by GTA 6 Countdown on X, says the workload has become unrealistic. The employee claims overtime is expected but not paid, and some colleagues have had to work until 3 AM even after finishing a full day shift. Work that would usually take five to six months is now being squeezed into just two to three months, making the pace hard to keep up with. The reviewer also says raising concerns internally hasn’t helped, leaving many feeling stressed and burned out.

Crunch has been linked to Rockstar Games for years. Near the end of work on Red Dead Redemption 2, there were reports of very long work weeks, sometimes close to 100 hours, which led to strong criticism. Studio leaders later admitted there was a problem and said they would try to improve work-life balance. The latest employee account suggests those changes are not being felt the same way across all teams.

How much human cost is tied to meeting the deadline for Grand Theft Auto VI?

The scale of GTA 6 adds another layer of pressure. It is one of the most anticipated releases in entertainment, so expectations are very high. Delays have only increased the attention on it. For developers, this often means tighter deadlines, especially as the project moves closer to important milestones.

The wider gaming industry has a long history of crunch before major releases. Developers and testers are often pushed hardest in the final stretch, when bugs, delays, and marketing promises collide. Fans may be frustrated if GTA 6 is delayed again. But for employees, avoiding that delay could mean longer workdays, unpaid overtime, and growing burnout. The release date may be important, but the cost behind it deserves attention too.

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