Big news in the gaming world! Valve has stealthily performed an unprecedented upgrade to the anti-cheat system in Counter-Strike 2, thoroughly disrupting the entire cheating ecosystem.
The update occurred in the late night of September 12th to 13th, without any prior notice or official statement from Valve, completing what can only be described as a ‘ninja operation.’ Within just a few hours, dozens of paid and private cheat service providers began to wail as detection rates skyrocketed, and cheating forums exploded with panic.
This VAC system upgrade is no joke. According to data miner Gabe Follower, Valve successfully dismantled most CS2 cheats, including DMA card-driven wallhacks and triggerbots. Even the automated crate-opening bots that have plagued the game’s economy fell victim to this cleanup.
As players cheer for this anti-cheat action, marking it as the ‘strongest yet for CS2,’ the cheating community is in utter despair. Years of cheating empires crumbled overnight, taking everyone by surprise.
Interestingly, community user ThourCS analyzed that this powerful anti-cheat system has been embedded in the game code since the CS2 beta—it was merely hidden until now. VAC 3.0 boasts real-time bans, AI technology, and system-level protections, finally showcasing its true power.
This silent update not only cleared the gaming environment but also sent a strong warning to the entire cheating industry: Think you can cheat in CS2? It’s not that easy!


