Valve apparently still hasn’t removed the infamous bug for which ESIC banned 37 coaches. This is surprising. After all, this bug has led to one of the biggest CS:GO scandals.
One of the most scandalous bugs in Counter-Strike: Global Offensive seems to still be in the game. Sergey “LMBT” Bezhanov is one of the 37 banned CS:GO coaches who allegedly abused the coaching bug. However, the verdict against him was overturned and his name cleared. LMBT shared a clip on Twitter last week in which he was waiting for a match to begin. The bug was still present in the process.
The infamous bug allows team coaches to see the match action from different angles that shouldn’t normally be accessed. This allows to see information about the game action and the positions of the opponents.
How the fuck it’s still there? Wasn’t in a coach sport for a while but now I see this ?!!!! @CSGO I though it was fixed… pic.twitter.com/GbkpiUqDhj
— Sergey LMBT Bezhanov (@LMBT_CSGO) May 15, 2021
This game bug was originally made public by Mariusz “Loord” Cybulski in August last year. According to Valve, the bug was fixed the same day Loord reported it.
However, Saturday’s video shows that the bug is still not fixed. Bezhanov denounced Valve and the ESIC for doing something about it.
The full investigation, which was led by ESIC, consisted of two people. These manually checked demos going back to 2016 – a time before the bans were confirmed. The duo examined about 20 percent of the nearly 100,000 demos. In the process, 37 coaches were banned, some for a few months, but some for up to three years.
This circumstance led Valve to stop allowing coaches to talk to players during online matches. The decision was understandably received very negatively.
Last January, Valve handed out “major” bans to some of the coaches who had already been banned. This banned them from several Major tournaments. The penalties ranged from bans for just one event to permanent bans.