1. Counter-Strike 2
  2. News

Counter-Strike 2 News

You can now drop grenades for your CS:GO teammates

Valve has just revealed the eleventh operation for Counter-Strike: Global Offensive, Operation Riptide. As is to be expected, there is a mountain of new stickers, skins, agents, and more for players to work towards earning over the next few months, but there are a few big gameplay and playlist changes dropping as well.


For starters, there have been some updates to playlists. Players can now finally host private Premier matches on Valve's own servers, and can invite friends to compete in these matches with queue codes. Seemingly as a result of recent debates around the length of matches in CS:GO, Valve has also added the option to play in shorter competitive matches. As well as the usual 30-round matches you can now also play 16-round, first-to-nine matches that Valves estimates will take around 25 minutes to complete.


In the gameplay department, there are a number of small but controversial changes on the way. Grenades can now be dropped for teammates like you can with weapons, which could see the development of a specific grenade-focused player role. There's always that one person in your team that knows all the good smokes, right?


Read the rest of the story...


RELATED LINKS:

CS:GO patch notes: what's new in the latest update?

The best competitive FPS games in 2021

Are CS:GO games too long?

Big CS:GO update adds shorter matches, riot shield, and fixes Dust 2's biggest problem




ll hail the developers of Counter-Strike: Global Offensive for, yea, they have listened to our pleas. Lo it was written that CTs moving to B-site on Dust 2 must always cross the double doors, which the Ts fire through while praying to RNGesus, and oft ye will take a hit and occasionally even a headshot, and it doth suck the big one. But from the mountaintop in Seattle come the new holy words: "Blocked visibility of mid from T spawn in Dust 2. Really!"..
Read more.

Counter-Strike: Global Offensive - Operation Riptide has just dropped

Well, it turns out Valve was indeed teasing something big for Counter-Strike: Global Offensive earlier this week. Today, the studio has launched the FPS game's next big operation, Riptide, which brings a batch of new game modes, maps, gameplay changes, challenges, and more.


Available by grabbing the new operation pass on Steam, CS:GO Operation Riptide introduces some pretty big updates to how you can dive into the shooter. One of these is through a new private matchmaking queues feature. This lets you generate a queue code for sharing with pals - or with people all in the same Steam group - to set up a private Premier match on Valve's servers. "Pair up, form your teams, or solo queue and let the matchmaker sort it out," the new operation overview explains.


Elsewhere, Riptide ushers in the option to pick from one of two match lengths on official (competitive matchmaking) CS:GO servers: short (MR16) and long (MR30) - or you can opt for 'no preference' if you're happy to dip into whichever. Team Deathmatch has also got some new options, with an added choice between "Classic Deathmatch, Team Deathmatch (first team to 100 kills wins), and Free-for-all Deathmatch (all players are enemies)".


Read the rest of the story...


RELATED LINKS:

The CS:GO Stockholm Major is going ahead, and tickets go on sale next week

This popular CSGO map brings hostage rescue to the spooky, snowy wilds

CS:GO Stockholm Major looking more likely with coming restrictions lift

Operation Riptide is live for Counter-Strike: Global Offensive

Operation Riptide is the 11th operating for Valve's free to play shooter Counter-Strike: Global Offensive.

Read the full article here: https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2021/09/operation-riptide-is-live-for-counter-strike-global-offensive