Fortnite players recently unearthed what many are calling a “V-Bucks hack.” Though in truth, it appears more like a hidden reward structure for those who purchased Founder’s Packs before June 29, 2020. Multiple reports show that such players now access boosted missions in Save the World mode, allowing them to accrue large V-Buck totals over time.
Under this system, standard daily missions that once rewarded 80 or 90 V-Bucks are now awarding 100, while other challenges like the Toxic Treasures alert or mini-boss tasks offer elevated payouts (for instance, 50 V-Bucks bonuses in situations that paid much less before). The twist: only players whose accounts held early Founder’s Pack status qualify. Since many of those gamers are longtime Save the World players, the benefit feels like overdue recognition.
What makes this interesting is that, unlike the usual “get free V-Bucks” scams, this appears to be baked into Fortnite’s logic, though deliberately obscured. Compared to blatant hacks or phishing schemes, this is a built-in reward tied to account history. Yet it still raises questions about fairness, transparency, and potential abuse.
Fortnite’s own communications provide some clarity. In their 2020 Save the World State of Development update, the team confirmed that existing Founder daily login rewards and V-Buck allocations would remain untouched, even after changes to pack series. That indicates Epic always planned to preserve value for early supporters, though the current “boosted mission” implementation may be a later evolution.
Another point, community chatter suggests this change is reaching Facebook groups and Reddit, with players reminding Founder holders to revisit their daily missions because “they’ve increased to 100 / 150 V-Bucks.” Several users describe logging in after months and seeing their mission rewards jump, something many before dismissed as rumor.
Interestingly, some Reddit posts hint at a controversial side tangent: speculation that Epic may soon enforce that V-Buck balances always round to multiples of 50. The supposed goal would be to streamline microtransaction systems, particularly in regions with strict currency rules. These claims haven’t been confirmed by Epic, but they reflect anxiety about how reward changes could retroactively affect earned balances.
Even though this “exploit” is not the usual shady hack, it still warrants scrutiny. The Fortnite ecosystem continues to attract malicious actors promising “free V-Bucks” generators or hacks. Sites carrying such offers are often phishing fronts, aiming to steal credentials or install malware. Many warning guides emphasize there is no legitimate shortcut to mass V-Buck farming outside of verified in-game systems.
Moreover, the gaming world is facing more advanced exploits like VIC (Virtual Machine Introspection Cheat), which can stealthily run cheats at a hypervisor level, bypassing anti-cheat detection. In a 2025 study, VIC was shown to enable tricks like wall hacks, radar, and trigger bots in games including Fortnite, all while staying silent to typical defenses. That illustrates how tech can be used to abuse systems, even if the current V-Buck boost seem legitimate.
While it’s tempting to call this a “hack,” what’s happening is likely a carefully coded reward mechanism for digital legacy holders. But that doesn’t mean it’s without controversy or risk. As with many systems that evolve quietly, balance, fairness, and trust will be tested if players perceive favoritism or unfair fragmentation.
For now, Founder’s Pack owners should check their Save the World missions and track how much extra they’re earning. And all players should stay alert: changes in reward structure or legacy benefits tend to hit hardest when unexpected.