The White House post appears heavily AI generated and centers on President Trump. Social posts suggest many users found the timing ironic given Rockstar's long history of framing government power as a target in the series. Rather than engage further, a Rockstar spokesperson offered a blunt reply when asked about the situation.
That non statement may signal Rockstar is choosing silence over a public fight, a route other publishers have taken when copyrighted game imagery gets pulled into political messaging. The White House was not the only official account to join the trend. US Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Kennedy posted an edited version of Rockstar's cover reveal video with the caption tying nutrition policy to the game's long wait.
We flipped the food pyramid before we got GTA 6.
That edit reportedly shows Kennedy, Trump, and several AI generated figures dressed as food on a mock cover. With GTA 6 still on track for a November release, political remixes of Rockstar marketing may keep surfacing as launch month approaches.





