Valve surprise launched Counter-Strike 2 on Steam

Valve kept its promise and launched the free CS:GO 2 update that overhauls the classic multiplayer game right before the end of September

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Just as it seemed like Valve might break its promise about the CS:GO 2 release date, the Steam-maker came through and quietly launched the free CS:GO 2 update. The multiplayer game‘s revamp was a quiet affair, released with no big announcements or anything other than a new Steam page and a brief trailer highlighting some of the sequel’s changes.  quietly launched the revamp with no fanfare and no proper announcement. 

“For over two decades, Counter-Strike has offered an elite competitive experience, one shaped by millions of players from across the globe,” Valve says in the Steam description. “And now the next chapter in the CS story is about to begin. This is Counter-Strike 2.”

“A free upgrade to CS:GO, Counter-Strike 2 marks the largest technical leap in Counter-Strike’s history. Built on the Source 2 engine, Counter-Strike 2 is modernized with realistic physically-based rendering, state-of-the-art networking, and upgraded Community Workshop tools.”

Over 1 million players flocked to the game within minutes, and while the numbers have since calmed down slightly from the 1.4 million high on Sep. 27, 2023, there are still 950,000 people playing CS:GO 2 at the time of writing.

Where big launches like Baldur’s Gate 3 broke Steam earlier in the year, the platform remained stable in spite of the sudden influx.

CS:GO 2 includes new ratings and leaderboards, updated maps, and “dynamic” smoke effects. That last one sounds like a silly marketing point, but if the trailer is anything to go by, it looks like it actually changes the game quite a bit. 

Your CS:GO items should have transferred over to CS:GO 2, so you won’t lose anything once you download the update.

CS:GO 2 is a free-to-play game and only requires a Steam account. You can pay $14.99 to get Prime status, though it’s not essential. Prime status means you can get matched with other Prime players and earn Prime-exclusive items, drops, and weapon cases. All the items are cosmetic, so aside from the matchmaking, you aren’t missing out on anything that would alter your experience with the game.

Written by Josh Broadwell on behalf of GLHF

Valve announces Counter-Strike 2 will launch soon as a CS:GO update

Counter-Strike 2 is real, and Valve said it’s coming soon as a free update for the popular CS:GO multiplayer game

Counter-Strike 2 is real, and Valve said it’s coming soon as a free update for the popular CS: GO multiplayer game. Counter-Strike 2 will launch sometime in summer 2023, but if you’re keen to see what Valve has in store before then, you may have a chance. Valve is selecting some CS: GO players to test an early version of Counter-Strike 2 as the team evaluates a handful of features.

Despite having a “2” in the name, this isn’t the second Counter-Strike game and is more like Overwatch 2 in the sense that it’s largely a technical improvement over the original. Counter-Strike 2 will replace CS: GO when it launches in the summer and promises a number of improvements over CS:GO.

One small change that Valve hopes has substantial effects is how smoke behaves. In Counter-Strike 2, smoke will move, reflect, and billow more naturally, so you can use it to fill open spaces, cause confusion, and even distract enemies in buildings while you go about your business.

Old maps received a glow-up with new rendering effects, while some brand-new maps showcase the engine’s new light and read abilities. Maps are brighter and cleaner, though classic maps remain largely unchanged aside from lighting and a few other effects.

Valve also said Counter-Strike 2 runs on improved servers that log actions as soon as they take place, instead of recognizing actions at set intervals of time, or in “ticks.” The hope is that the FPS game will run more smoothly and be more responsive as a result. There’s no set release date for the Counter-Strike 2 update, and given the way Valve operates, they’ll probably announce the date seemingly at random one day when no one expects it.

Written by Josh Broadwell on behalf of GLHF

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The best FPS games – the top 17 shooters of all time

We just chose the best 15 first-person shooters.

Once they were a vehicle for tech innovation, then everyone’s favorite storytelling medium. When we all got online, shooters were there to show us why that was exciting. Whenever the newspapers needed a moral panic, shooters were happy to provide one. 

Perhaps more than any other genre, a list of the best shooters tells a story about the medium and what we wanted from it at the time. It’s shapeshifted into something athletes can devote their lives to and fill arenas through their talents, but it’s also been there to ask us uncomfortable questions about what we see on the news. At this point, its library is so rich that it can even parody itself from years past, and to great effect. 

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That makes picking just 17 of them a hard task. So we didn’t – instead we built a vast learning AI, made it play every FPS released since the dawn of time, and provide us an empirical ranking of their quality. 

Okay, that was a lie. Look, we just chose the best 17 shooters, ok? Get off our backs. That does mean just one game from each series though – otherwise you’d be about to read a lot of Quake and Half-Life entries.

Free PC games – 15 of the best free games you can play right now on PC

Happily enough, some of the best PC titles out there today are available free of charge.

The concept of free PC games might fill you with suspicion, and you’re not wrong to be wary of f2p models. But happily enough, some of the best titles out there today are available free of charge, and don’t limit your access or make you spam people like all your Facebook friends who used to play Farmville.

We’ve got some of the most popular esports games of all time here for you, one of the legendary Orange Box games, multiple incredible battle royales and a couple of card games with a cozier atmosphere than a log cabin full of puppies. There are some microtransactions within some of them, but they’re not intrusive, nor are they required to get the most out of these games.

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‘DieHardBirdie’ interview – world’s oldest esports champion hopes to inspire more seniors to play

Before Lenovo recruited him to play at DreamHack 2017, Abbe Borg had never really heard about competitive gaming.

At 79 years old, Abbe Borg, also known by his gaming handle, “DieHardBirdie”, is the oldest esports champion in the world. But before Lenovo recruited him to play at DreamHack 2017, he had never really heard about competitive gaming. 

“I was in some commercials in Sweden,” he tells USA Today. “That’s how Lenovo found me. Their first question was if I was interested in playing games – esports games. And I said, ‘Alright. I’m curious. I’ll do it if they will.’”

The game was Counter-Strike: Global Offensive – A first-person shooter which sees opposing teams of five players take turns attacking and defending, winning a point if they achieve their objective without being stopped, or if they eliminate all five of the opposing players. The first team to 16 points wins.

Borg earned his nickname, “DieHardBirdie”, while training with his teammates. He has a unique ability to mimic birds by whistling – a sound his opponents often hear when he takes aim.

Their team came to be called the Silver Snipers, and though they didn’t win in 2017, they garnered the affection of fans and eventually won the seniors tournament in DreamHack 2019.

But Borg hasn’t been idle since then. Building on the momentum he gained in 2019, he’s recently begun putting together another team of seniors, called The Golden Snipers, and plans on competing next year. 

OGL.tv announced a special event in June 2022 where The Golden Snipers will compete against Japan’s first-ever all-senior team, The Matagi Snipers. “If the Covid situation is unchanged, there will be some questions about travel,” Borg says. “But if everything is okay, then we’ll fly to Dallas. Let’s dance!” 

As the world’s oldest esports champion, Borg admires Japan for putting together their first senior team with 14 members. He feels like this competition is a way to legitimize senior esports competitions and show the world they are all young at heart – anything is possible. He wants to inspire and encourage the world to pay more attention to seniors and gaming, and work to bridge the generational gap. “It’s possible, I think,” he says. “I hope more elderly people will be watching esports and try to play. We need to wake up their spirits, and ask them to find some guts to try and play, to find some support from their family, their children and grandchildren.” 

Borg believes it would be impossible to get into gaming as a senior from the ground up without support. The older generation might be interested in games but are just too shy to try on their own.  He says his grandchildren are his biggest inspiration and loves to watch how they play. And thanks to gaming, he was able to stay in touch while separated from his family due to pandemic-related travel restrictions.

“Nobody knows about this, but I think about my health,” he explains. “This game helps me. My fingers go very fast now. I used to have pain in my fingers, but that’s no more. My coordination between my hands and eyes is very good. My reflexes are faster than ever. I feel good. And I find after playing, I’m not tired. It’s not about winning and losing. But this game helps me.” 

Borg, however, is very quick to point out that senior gaming is growing. “Just now, there are senior teams everywhere: Germany, Russia, Ukraine, Portugal, Sweden, Finland,” he explains. “It’s growing.” 

While being young has its natural advantages in esports, Borg has learned that age and experience play a role too. “Patience, patience, patience,” he repeats. “I can be careful, and watchful. Whatever I do, I have to follow through to the end. For me, time is no limit.” As a professional artist, he knows craftsmanship can’t be rushed, and neither can a good game. He plays carefully and deliberately. That patience is something you learn with maturity.

It comes as no surprise to Borg that kids might dream of being a professional gamer, streamer, or esports competitor. But he’s very realistic. “If a kid wants to be a gamer, you should ask again in five years,” he says before noting that streaming full-time is a lot of work. He’s seen some streamers go for 10 -15 hours. “It’s too much,” he says. “If a kid tells a teacher they want to be a professional gamer, sure that’s great. But ask them again in a few years.”

Despite his concerns over long gaming sessions, Borg is proof that gaming doesn’t have to be unhealthy or negative. And he isn’t concerned with the idea that video games promote violence or bring out the worst in people. “Games are mostly positive,” he says. “Some people talk about the violence, but there’s more violence in real life than in the game. If someone doesn’t like violence, there are so many [other kinds of] games.

“I can only answer for myself, but I feel good. I have fun. The people I play against aren’t my enemy, they are just my opponents. The end is the end.”

Ever since he was first inducted into the world of esports and gaming, he has become a regular player, too. Through Counter-Strike, Borg has found a new means of acquiring skills, overcoming obstacles, and connecting with people. Right now, he’s eager to get back into competing, but he isn’t nervous. 

“Maybe a week before, I’ll be nervous,” he laughs. For now, he isn’t overthinking it. He hasn’t even been able to begin training in earnest while he waits to recover from a cataract removal. “I plan to begin training in two weeks,” Borg continues. “Before, I couldn’t see anything but shadows. Everything was grey. I’m just thinking about being okay. And in two weeks I can play.”

In the meantime, he’s had plenty of time to think about his last tournaments. “Communication is key,” he reflects. “There are five members on a team. Each member is thinking differently. But we have to be like a fist, working together like five fingers.”

According to Borg, watching himself play Counter-Strike has become a good way of correcting his mistakes. “I’m watching. I prefer to play. But I watch…,” he says. “And I watch my games too. I can see what kinds of mistakes I make. You know, I’ve been killed so many times, I have to see what I did wrong. It’s very important to play against someone who is better. This gives you a chance to be better.”

While he’s already dropping ice-cold wisdom, Borg offers some more words of advice to anyone who wants to play Counter-Strike for the first time. “Just calm down,” he says. “Be cool. You’re just playing. You’ll have fun… that’s it, I’m doing this without stress. Sometimes and I do a stupid movement and I’m killed and I say, ‘Oh shit’.” 

Borg believes the narrative of the generational gap is changing thanks to gaming and hopes to see it continue to change as more people pick up games and engage with them in a healthy and positive way. 

Written by Rett Weissenfels on behalf of GLHF.

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Na’Vi crowned champions at record-breaking ‘Counter-Strike: Global Offensive’ tournament

The world watched as S1mple took home his first Major win.

Na’Vi won the 2021 PGL Major Stockholm Championships in Counter-Strike: Global Offensive  on Sunday.

After competing in 15 Majors over the past several years only to come up every time, team Na’Vi finally came out on top at a Counter-Strike: Global Offensive  Major. Not only did Na’Vi take home $1 million in winnings, they set were part of what might go down in history as one of the biggest esports tournaments to date. The 2021 PGL Major Stockholm finals reached a staggering new peak concurrent viewer number for Counter-Strike: Global Offensive  at 2.7 million, Esports Charts  reported Sunday.

Check out the live audience reaction to Na’Vi taking home the gold for yourself below.

Arguably the biggest reason for the staggering viewer numbers is due to Na’Vi’s own Aleksandr ‘S1mple’ Kostyliev winning his first Major. Kostyliev is widely known as the best Counter-Strike: Global Offensive  pro despite never winning a championship of this caliber. Well, no longer! Kostyliev even came out as MVP of the tournament, HLTV  reported Sunday. That’s quite an achievement, especially considering Na’Vi went undefeated the 2021 PGL Major Stockholm championships.

Kostyliev recently made headlines with S1mple Formulaa documentary about his life and rise to esports fame. Many are speculating that he will jump over to Valorant  in the coming months.

Written by Kyle Campbell on behalf of GLHF.

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5 tips from ‘CS:GO’ pros to make you better, right now

A few tips from the pros to up your game.

Since its birth as a mod for Half-Life in *checks notes* the late 1700s, Counter-Strike has undergone many a facelift, engine migration, and mechanical revamp. But the proposition has always been the same: a team shooter with an eco metagame and a huge emphasis on raw shooting skill. 

It’s not lightning-fast like Quake, it’s not as rigorous about simulating reality as Escape From Tarkov, but modern-day CS:GO is considered one of the purest tests of a player’s aim and strategic nous out there. See also: incredible nades. 

Rookies don’t have an easy time picking up a game that’s been out there in various forms since 2000, and even those who’ve lapsed – or never got all that great in the first place – can find themselves overwhelmed by cryptic playcalls, improbable headshots, or barbed deployments of the letters ‘E’ and ‘Z’. 

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Lucky it has such a competitive and established esports scene. So let’s steal all the pro gamers’ habits and *clears throat* git gud. In list format, because the internet.

PGL Esports president believes big LAN events can only return if all attendees are vaccinated

PGL Esports will require proof of vaccination for guests to attend live events.

Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, esports events have been hurting, and PGL’s president believes massive tournaments can only return if all attendees provide proof of vaccination. Insisting that future events put on by PGL Esports will indeed require everyone attending will need to be vaccinated. 

PGL Esports is responsible for organizing and producing some of the biggest competitive gaming events in the world. From Counter-Strike: Global Offensive and Apex Legends majors to DOTA 2’s The International, the organization has loads of experience and know-how on what is required to make these things a success. Silviu Stroie, CEO at PGL, wants those grandiose events to return, and the organization is being proactive about it. 

“I firmly believe the only way to bring back massive LAN events is to require complete vaccination of attending players, talent, spectators,” Stroie said on Twitter. “This will be a requirement for all upcoming PGL 2022 events.”

PGL Esports is helping organize DOTA 2’s 2021 The International tournament, of course, and a ticket sales post on DOTA 2’s blog confirms vaccination is required to get into the event.

Written by Kyle Campbell on behalf of GLHF

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