In early 2025, a mod for Final Fantasy 14 named "Playerscope" raised significant privacy concerns due to its ability to scrape hidden player data. This mod could access details such as character information, retainer data, and any alternate characters linked to a Square Enix account. Playerscope allowed users to track specific player data of anyone nearby, sending this information to a centralized database managed by the mod's author. This tracking included sensitive details like "Content ID" and "Account ID," which could be used to monitor players across different characters, exploiting the Content ID system introduced in the Dawntrail expansion.
The only way to opt out of this data scraping was to join a private Discord channel and request exclusion. This means that every Final Fantasy 14 player not in the channel was potentially having their data collected, posing a major privacy risk. The community's reaction was swift and vocal, with one Reddit user stating, "the purpose is obvious, to stalk people."
The mod gained significant attention after its source code was found on Github, leading to a surge in its popularity. However, due to violations of terms of service, Playerscope was removed from Github. It was reportedly mirrored on other platforms like Gittea and Gitflic, but IGN confirmed that the repository no longer exists on these sites. There's a possibility that the mod is still being shared in private communities.

In response to the situation, Final Fantasy 14's producer and director, Naoki 'Yoshi-P' Yoshida, issued a statement on the game's official forum. He acknowledged the existence of third-party tools like Playerscope that access hidden character information and are used to correlate data across different characters on the same service account. Yoshida emphasized that personal information such as addresses and payment details cannot be accessed by these tools. He outlined the development and operations teams' considerations, which include requesting the tool's removal and pursuing legal action. Yoshida reiterated the prohibition of third-party tools under the Final Fantasy 14 User Agreement and stressed the importance of maintaining a safe environment for players.
Despite the ban on third-party tools, tools like Advanced Combat Tracker are commonly used by the raiding community and referenced on sites like FFlogs. Yoshida's mention of potential legal action marks a significant escalation in the game's stance against such mods.
The Final Fantasy 14 community has responded critically to Yoshida's statement. One user commented, "fixing the game to break the mod isn’t on the list of options they’re considering I see." Another suggested, "or you could just see how not to expose the information on [the player’s] client side. Of course, this means extra work which they did not plan for, but is Final Fantasy 14 really on such a tight schedule and budget they can't deal with these things properly?" A third user expressed disappointment, saying, "Kind of a disappointing statement that really fails to acknowledge the root cause of the problem."
The author of Playerscope has yet to respond to the controversy.