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CS:GO pros banned after hacking scandal

With Dreamhack Winter 2014 coming up this weekend, tensions were already running high for professional Counter Strike: Global Offensive players, but now things have been cranked up to 11. Some of the world's top professionals at the game, have been caught using third party aimbots and other cheating tools, prompting team management and tournament organisers, to ban them from future events.

While most of them had been slipping past the net for some time, when one CS:GO pro tripped a third party anti-hack tool, Valve did some investigations of its own and found several high ranked pro-gamers were using aimbots. High profile busts include Hovik “KQLY” Tovmassian and Gordon “SF” Giry, both of whom have been banned by their respective teams (Titan and Epsilon), even though it turns out they hadn't used any hacking tools during competition.

Both players have since apologised for their actions.

csgo
Dreamhack's CS GO prize pool is $250,000 so people may be looking for any edge they can get

Understandably with Dreamhack coming up, the organisers will no doubt be taking extra special precautions to make sure none of the people on its roster of talent managed to use an aimbot of some kind to improve their chances, though it would be foolhardy for anyone to try when there is this much attention on them.

While Kotaku draws comparisons with cheating in other sports however, you have to imagine that simply making all pros use specifically set up PCs with no networking capability beyond setting up the game and streaming it, would make it pretty difficult for anyone to use any third party tool that would have an effect. That's certainly less of the case when it comes to PEDs or similar.

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KitGuru Says: Are you guys pleased that this was found out before Dreamhack? Or do you think it paints the sport in a bad light when it was being put under the spotlight anyway?

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11 comments

  1. Murarasu Ioan Gabriel

    no mercy for them.

  2. It’s still not been proven whether they used them in competition I don’t think?

  3. I can’t believe this is actually considered to be news worthy…

  4. Apparently not, but Valve cant allow them to compete when they have broken the rules, even if it was in MatchMaking.
    You would think that being as good as they are they wouldn’t feel the need to use a bot, which completely bypasses all skill levels, rendering their hard work irrelevant?

  5. Doesn’t matter to Valve, they are happy to do whatever the hell they want since they control the PC gaming market. It’s the same situation as when they removed Paranautical Activity from Steam just because one of the developers had a rant on twitter. To hell with the rest of the devs who put hard work and effort into the game, punish everyone for the choice of the few. Valve are not the great company they once were, they are so out of touch in their ivory towers.

  6. Don’t want to be banned? Don’t cheat. Simple. Cheaters are trash.

  7. Only retards reply to me

    It’s newsworthy within the context of a gaming & tech oriented news website. Context is everything…

  8. Well said xD, its not like this is national news

  9. People banned from Dreamhack for… hacking… oh the irony

  10. i agree with edkode (cheaters are trash even if te are pro’s or not rules are for every one) if valve bans your account final you agree with the terms of servicesep…
    to keep it simple dont cheat!

  11. even if your not playing “a competition”, aim bots and the like are just wrong. The biggest “hack” I ever use in online games was to re-bind a key on a stubborn game, anything else is unfair and puts down good players.