Federal authorities arrested Zyaire Dontaevious Zamarion Wilkins, a 21-year-old from North Lauderdale, Florida, on July 14 for allegedly orchestrating a malware scheme that siphoned at least $220,000 in cryptocurrency from unsuspecting gamers. The operation, which ran from roughly May 2024 to February 2026, involved planting malicious code inside video games distributed on what appears to be Valve’s Steam platform.
Wilkins, who allegedly went by the alias “Sibel.eth,” is charged with conspiracy to obtain information through computer means for private financial gain. The charge carries a maximum penalty of ten years in prison.
Uber Eats gift cards and a digital paper trail
Investigators traced Wilkins through a web of Bitcoin transactions linked to approximately 150 Uber Eats gift cards, all delivered to addresses associated with him, including one at the University of West Florida.
According to the FBI complaint, Wilkins and unnamed co-conspirators launched eight malware-embedded games that infected approximately 8,000 devices. The malware gave attackers access to around 80 cryptocurrency wallets, which were subsequently drained.
The game titles reportedly included names like BlockBlasters, Dashverse, and PirateFi. A raid on Wilkins’ home turned up devices that investigators say correlated directly with the crypto activity in question. The seized hardware reflected roughly $382,000 in total transactional flows, a figure notably larger than the $220,000 in confirmed theft.
Wilkins was reportedly uncooperative during the FBI’s search of his premises.
How the scheme worked
The attack vector was deceptively simple. Upload a game to a major distribution platform. Embed malware that activates once installed. Harvest wallet credentials, private keys, or browser-stored crypto data from the victim’s machine. Drain wallets.
Earlier incidents tied to the same game titles had already flagged approximately $150,000 in losses before Wilkins’ arrest. The FBI’s Seattle Division had set up a public victim-intake form earlier in 2026, soliciting reports from people affected by specific game titles. That outreach apparently helped build the case that led to Wilkins’ arrest.
A first-of-its-kind prosecution
This arrest appears to be the first known public charge stemming from a malware operation specifically targeting users through Steam. Steam hosts tens of thousands of games, and eight malware-laden games survived on the platform long enough to infect 8,000 machines.
The $382,000 in transactional flows found on Wilkins’ seized devices raises the question of whether additional charges or co-conspirator arrests are forthcoming. The FBI complaint references unnamed accomplices, and an operation spanning nearly two years across eight separate game titles suggests infrastructure beyond what a single individual typically maintains.


