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Counter-Strike 2 News

Release Notes for 8/3/2023

[ MAPS ]
  • Anubis
    • Improved movement clipping map-wide
    • Adjustments to collision around pillars
    • Plugged holes in world geometry
    • Fixed issues with weapon and bomb clipping through world geometry
  • Ancient
    • Improved water clarity at T spawn
    • Adjustments to jumpable locations
    • Adjustments to collision around corners
    • Various adjustments to lighting

[ MISC ]
  • Fixed an issue with round restart in the middle of weapon reloading
  • Fixed a case where incendiary grenades fail to detonate in water
  • Ragdoll limbs splash when they hit water

Counter-Strike 2 update adds beloved map, but removes iconic game mode

Counter-Strike 2 is one of the most exciting FPS games yet to release, and Valve has kept the hype going with its limited playtest. The team behind Steam has been hard at work improving Counter-Strike 2 with regular updates and additions, testing how different game modes and maps work within the most recent build. The developers added some popular reworked maps like Overpass and Vertigo recently, but it looks like the time to test other features has come. CS2 has now removed such maps as well as the 2v2 Wingman game mode, implementing other overhauled areas instead.


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RELATED LINKS:

CSGO gambling sponsorships banned by Twitch, as Valve also cracks down

All Counter-Strike 2 maps confirmed so far

Counter-Strike 2 release date window, skins, trailers, leaks

Valve resets the rules on pro CS:GO tournaments: 'we've seen professional Counter-Strike drift away' from its ideals




fter years of taking a hands-off approach to the pro CS:GO scene, Valve has very suddenly announced major changes to the rules governing tournament organizers that it says will help ensure that ability, and not money, determine which teams rise to the top of competitive events...
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A Level Playing Field

Counter-Strike is at its best when teams compete on a level playing field and when ability is the only limit to their success.

Over the past few years, we’ve seen professional Counter-Strike drift away from that ideal. The ecosystem has become gradually less open, with access to the highest levels of competition increasingly gated by business relationships.

We think that Counter-Strike should be an open sport. So we’re going to add new requirements to running large-scale competitive events. The finer details are still in progress, but here are the broad strokes:
  • Tournament organizers will no longer have unique business relationships or other conflicts of interest with teams that participate in their events.

  • Invitations to all tournaments will use our ranking system (detailed here), or otherwise be determined by open qualifiers.

  • Any compensation for participating teams—prize pool or otherwise—will be made public and will be driven by objective criteria that can be inspected by the community.
Since tournament organizers have existing long term commitments, these requirements will take effect as of 2025. There will be some rough edges to the transition, but we’re committed to the long-term health of Counter-Strike as a sport and are looking forward to its bright and open future.

Twitch bans 'promotion or sponsorship' of CS:GO skin gambling




Late last year Twitch began to take the issue of gambling streams on its platform seriously, issuing new guidelines that prohibited such content and triggering an exodus of content creators that gambled on-stream. This saw major figures such as xQc, a hugely popular Canadian streamer who often gambles big money and admits he has a problem, move over to Twitch rival Kick, which allows gambling (though the $100 million definitely helped)...
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