Super Sushi Samurai Game Suffers $4.6 Million Hack via Smart Contract Exploit
The team is working with a white hat hacker to recover the stolen funds, as the game's token value plummets.
- A Telegram game named Super Sushi Samurai experienced a $4.6 million hack due to a smart contract exploit, affecting its liquidity provider wallets.
- The exploit allowed users to double their funds by transferring their entire balance back to themselves, exploiting a bug in the token contract.
- The game's team is collaborating with the apparent white hat hacker for the safe return of funds, describing the incident as a white hat rescue.
- Super Sushi Samurai, which operates on the Ethereum layer-2 network Blast, saw its native token's value plummet over 99% following the hack.
- Despite the hack, traders snapped up the game's tokens in anticipation of a potential reimbursement and price recovery.