Grand Theft Auto V fans have been digging and digging, hoping to find any sign that Rockstar Games will release a PC version of their favorite game this year. A new report claims to have found new evidence that the PC game is under development.

PC Gamer reports finding a bug log with information about a PC version of Grand Theft Auto V.

"The document contains over 170 references to PC development bugs, numerous notes on DX11 support and a related 'smog' weather setting, mention of a 'lastgen' toggle used during development and bugs relating to 64-bit system testing," the website said.

The report is reportedly 150-pages-long and discusses issues from Grand Theft Auto V builds ranging from April 2009 until August 2013. The report apparently mentions a "PC version" of the game since as early as June 2012.

In addition, PC Gamer reports that Rockstar Game developers make appearances in the document.

"There are annotations from Rockstar developers like programmer Robert Schmitz and senior level designer Kenneth Ross, and references to proprietary Rockstar management systems," PC Gamer said.

This is not the first time the document has been made known to gamers. Back in Sept. 23, 2013, some fan communities and GTA forums knew of the secret document. Since then, however, the document was hosted on a public Google Drive, but the page now shows a 404 Error message.

You can check out snapshots from the document here.

Last week, Motoring crunch reported that sources have seen "dumped data" via "XML code that came from the console version of GTA 5." The website believes that the dumped data was for a PC game. According to a Brazilian retailer, the PC game will be released in March, and Amazon customer support representatives claim that the game will be released on Mar. 12 in the United States and Mar. 14 in Europe.