Sunday, February 1, 2026
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Unikrn bags another $7million of investment to expand further

3

More of what comes not as a surprise. Unikrn (pronounced as ‘unicorn’) reportedly raised a $7mn of funding from Binary capital, which totals to the company initial capital hit $10mns. Mark Cuban, previously invested into the organization.

unikrn-screen

Aside of CSGOLounge and DotA2Lounge separately, Unikrn lists all the major eSports game under one hood and allows the gambling to be non-distracted and smooth.

The startup, led by a very famous and active entrepreneur Rahul Sood, which not to be forgotten is also one of the Board Members at Razer.  Unikrn basically helps people place bets on upcoming eSports matches, such as League of Legends, Dota 2, and Starcraft 2 which has a large professional scenes.

Betting is a term often listed below the ‘illegal activities’ in most of the countries, and doesn’t allow gambling of real money. Unikrn however, has a proactive solution to that which allows it to focus less on the gambling laws by having the operating partner Tabcorp, an Australian company, at their ventures.

North-American Team IBP Accused Of Being Guilty In Cheating Scandal In CS:GO Competitive Scene

0

In a reportedly another cheating scandal by top North American Counter Strike roaster, iBUYPOWER (ibp), this time the cheating wasn’t involved with third party softwares, but, intentionally loosing to the other team with distant odds to win big on bettings.

The incident, being the match played between ibp and NetcodeGuides.com which was on 21st of August 2014 of CEVO Professional Season 5, where iBUYPOWER’s strange in-game strategies and tactics lead to the spectators and other professionals being suspicious and smelt, sandbagging.
Leaving no questions unanswered, the team and their management managed to escape the suspicious environment by rulling out the reasons of loosing an unexpected match with a similar unpredictable score line of 16-4.

‘ShahZAM’ from NetcodeGuides.com revealed before the match to a journalist (name undisclosed) about where the match was going to fall, on whose part.

The screenshots from CSGOLounge and the private conversations also shocked the entire community with shame. Most bets in the Counter-Strike group happen on the site Cs:go Lounge, where players wager in-amusement things with true esteem on matches. On account of data gave by the site, we can affirm that Pham put down a few vast wagers on the amusement, actually set so far as to make various records (known as “smurfs”) singularly with the end goal of wagering on this diversion. At the time Cs:go Lounge worker Courtney “Nectar” Timpson had his suspicions and had started his own particular examination concerning the onrushing of sizable wagers encompassing the diversion. He was astounded to find that most of the huge winning wagers on that amusement prompted Pham or individuals on Pham’s Steam companions list.

 

Duc “cud” Pham, a Vietnamese student in the U.S., has been around the North American professional scene for a while and even played in LunatiK eSports when they won ESEA’s Counter-Strike: Global Offensive Main Division 15th season. He supplements his income through skins betting and trading—his Steam account advertises the sale of keys for the virtual cases that the game “drops” for players.

“He had nine smurf accounts that he controlled directly that all placed the maximum value bet that they could, yielding a return of $1193.14 value each. Some of these accounts were created specifically to bet on this match. At the time I thought it was strange because he wasn’t much of a ‘YOLO’ better. By that I mean, he would sometimes bet on the underdog but never before this much and never with his smurfs.”

After all these massacres, the latest development which revealed that the match was thrown away by iBUYPOWER intentionally as they made $ 1200 per account on their 9 smurf accounts, shocking isn’t it? Although the management fails to answer the questions at their convenience, the screenshots thus prove that the match was intentionally lost in the concern of winning huge amounts from bettings.

Team SoLoMid now world’s highest paid CS:GO eSports team

Yes, this is no joke. The former Danish roster, Team Dignitas have now officially joined Team SoLoMid and are reportedly being paid the highest salary comparitively to any other CSGO team in the world.

The best in the world of League of Legends, Team SoLoMid (TSM) recently acquired Diginitas esports’ CSGO division to form a new and strong organization under their management.

Team Dignitas

According to a very close source, the team is the highest paid Esports team ever and no other team in the world has been paid something like that which also includes the maginificient laws and clauses. The players from SoLoMid will be free to take their share from the tournament money without being sharing their revenue with the organization as of now. They will also be entitled and set free to have some in the buckets through Twitch streaming.

In a statement to Daily Dot, the source revealed:

“The players are being paid $3,000 a month each, which is a vast amount in Counter-Strike terms,” the person added. “The teams that have been considered the best in the world haven’t even earned that kind of money. They have also been promised 100 percent of the Valve sticker money, which if they were to get into a legends pack could be as much as $400,000 divided between the team.”

Effecting from 1st of February’15, TSM will be a global identity having a CS:GO team. Team SoLoMid is widely recognized as the most sucessfull Esports organziation, they are also known for making their League of Legend players professional steamers which also helped them with consistent earnings.

“Don’t think kriSSh can cheat, but India always comes first”: National CSGO Captain Karthik ‘Katalyst’ Rao

0

The recent announcement of the World CS:GO Championship by E-Frag.net has given a chance to the non-traditional Counter-Strike powerhouses such as India to showcase their talent on the biggest stage of them all.

However, Krishna “kriSSH” Salecha’s recent VAC ban has put the international spotlight on the Indian CSGO community, which had recently announced it’s roster for the World Championship.

As kriSSh continues to prove his innocence, we caught up with team captain Karthik “Katalyst” Rao to discuss various aspects about the national team selection.

Q. What was the basic criterion for the selection of the national team?

“Teamwork”. Can the squad members get along with rival team players? The tournament format not allowing us to have the entire team represent as ” Team India” put me in a fix.

Q. How difficult was the selection, any specific areas you faced difficulties in?

As mentioned above the difficulty was to make sure that the selected members get along with each other.

Q. The post on esports.co.in shows the exclusion of Krishhh, due to a VAC ban. What are your thoughts about the ban?

I am with kriSSh on this issue. I know how passionate Indian gamers are. I do not think a player like him, who has participated in events like ESWC global finals requires to prove to any of the Indian audience. If he has to prove, it is to the global audience. I hope he remains strong in this difficult situation.

He has written to Valve from what i have been told. If Valve sticks to their decision, I have to respect that.

Coming back to my update of keeping him out, I had to. At no cost I can put the reputation of “Team India” and E-Frag TWC at stake.

Q. Which player do you think will be a difference maker from the team?

Ritesh / RitZ. I expect him to lead “Team India” to victory, first in the Asian qualifiers & later at grand finals.

Q. Finishing in the top 3 of Asia could be a difficult task considering teams such as Vietnam and China, which team do you think will be the most difficult opposition?

I do not wish to see the squad underestimate any team. This format can surprise many of us. I won’t be surprised if we make it to top 3 in qualifiers.’

Q. The team has been selected from the top three teams in India, were there any players from other teams that caught your eye?

Honestly, No. I felt this team has to have the most experienced than skilled. I’ve been following many CS:Go tournaments. I knew my picks very well.

Q. Apart from the selection of the team, what will be your role in the team?

I am responsible to coordinate with the organizers and bridge the gap between them and players. Apart from that I will need to keep the squad motivated to perform.

Q. Globally, CS GO growth has been rampant, do you think it has grown at a similar pace in India?

No. I would say gaming cafes are mostly responsible for this. If only they had better configuration, most CS 1.6 players would have switched perhaps?

At the same time, the growth has been good/fast when compared to CS 1.6 days.

Q. Which player do you think has been in top form amongst the ones selected?

Everyone:- )

Q. What are your expectations from the qualifiers?

Be in the top 3. Qualify for the grand finals. This could motivate the Indian CS:GO community.

G2A.com ties up with PayTM to increase India expansion

0

One of gaming’s biggest e-commerce websites, G2A.com recently graduated to another next level of sustainability by tying up with long time payment website, Paytm. This brings in another facet of growth in G2A’s ever-growing selling base.

g2a-bannerb

PayTM’s introduction of the wallet method of paying will definitely catch the eye of gamers everywhere. However, there is a holistic goal to venture.  With PayTM increasing advertising of it’s payment method on Indian television, it is using G2A to rope in the Indian Gaming crowd.

In turn, G2A has also tied up with several Indian media organisations to spread the word.  Companies such as Talkesport, AFK Gaming, Neckbreak Gaming, Team Brutality and R4IDFORCE have joined hands with G2A. The other payment methods on G2A also include Paypal. Apart from these existent ones, G2A has it’s own payment method called G2APay. After ESEA, this is yet another major international organisation joining the India bandwagon, to increase its reach in the dormant esports powerhouse. Let’s hope more companies decide to take plunge as well.

Valve responds to Steam Market price glitch, says effected transactions will be rolledback

1

If you are an active Steam trader or a reddit browser, you probably have come across this issue the previous evening, where Steam users were able to buy or sell items at some unbelievable rates which you would surely like to. It was officially confirmed later, that the market really went through some unexplained bug which made prices go crazy up and down.

SteamOS_1

Valve got stuck with a massive outbreak the previous night and we were also one of those who got infected or affected by the same, here’s what happened:

If you are strong in General Knowledge, Indonesian currency Rupiah and US $ has a vast difference, i.e.
$ 1 USD = 13005.50 Indonesian Rupiah. And what went wrong the previous day was Steam Servers and Market recognized (reason still unknown) $ 13005.50 USD = 13005.50 Indonesian Rupiah which meant a straightaway 1:1 for Indonesians if they are looking forward to buy items from market in USD pricing. And according to Redditors:

 

WHAT THIS MEANT:

  • Items that were listed for $3.00 USD in the Steam market were bought for 3 Rupiahs, meaning the seller got 0 USD (cause 3 Indonesian Rupiah is worth basically almost 0USD)!
  • All the “cheap” items were bought up by Indonesian traders, leaving some items such as valuable CSGO knives to be listed at a few million US Dollars on the Steam community market (1 million Rupiahs is still just $77).

To be more specific on how millions of users tricked Steam to sell their items at a skyrocketed pricing or buying at dipped down rates, users changed their preferred currencies to Indonesian Rupiahs to fulfil transactions on the affected Steam Market and after sucessfully completing it, they were back to their default currency preferences. We got touch in with few of the users to took the undue advantage and found out that they actually sold the Case keys of 2.49$ (the actual cost) at a whopping 40$ (the market affected cost) just by using the above mentioned trick.

So, what happens next? Valve officially released an statement explaining on how these things forced them to take down Market for a couple of hours scheduling the Rollback. (explained later in the post)

Early this morning, a problem with our currency exchange rate data allowed users who use Indonesian Rupiahs in their Steam wallet to make purchases on the Community Market at heavily discounted prices. We have reverted as many of these purchases as possible. Steam Trading and the Community Market were both disabled while this rollback process was occurring, but are now enabled once again.

A relatively small set of users have one or more transactions where the item was restored back to the seller, but the wallet funds have not yet been returned to the buyer. We are still working to resolve this issue and appreciate your patience while we sort everything out.

Users using codes to add Indonesian Rupiahs to their Steam Wallets may have noticed that the wrong amount was added. These credits will be fixed later today.

Rollback, the one and only survival wayout for steam. It is just like an undo command which takes down everything back to time of events, Rollingback a database is a lengthy and buggy process but it does revert back all the events in the span of time it’s choosen to be rolledback. This will be implemented and the affect will remain mainly for few more hours till today evening.

Although, this Flash Market crisis will do affect a lot of users and items, but this is the only option left with Valve to recover back the millions and even billions of losses they have incurred in several hours of the glitch.. and this also looks scary and no one can even vouch for it about not being repeated again in the coming time?

iBP and NetcodeGuides allegedly involved in a cheating scandal

0

In a reportedly another cheating scandal by top North American Counter Strike roaster, iBUYPOWER (ibp), this time the cheating wasn’t involved with third party softwares, but, intentionally loosing to the other team with distant odds to win big on bettings.

The incident, being the match played between ibp and NetcodeGuides.com which was on 21st of August 2014 of CEVO Professional Season 5, where iBUYPOWER’s strange in-game strategies and tactics lead to the spectators and other professionals being suspicious and smelt, sandbagging.
Leaving no questions unanswered, the team and their management managed to escape the suspicious environment by rulling out the reasons of loosing an unexpected match with a similar unpredictable score line of 16-4.

‘ShahZAM’ from NetcodeGuides.com revealed before the match to a journalist (name undisclosed) about where the match was going to fall, on whose part.

[PICTURES REMOVED ON REQUEST]


[PICTURES REMOVED ON REQUEST]

The screenshots from CSGOLounge and the private conversations also shocked the entire community with shame. Most bets in the Counter-Strike group happen on the site Cs:go Lounge, where players wager in-amusement things with true esteem on matches. On account of data gave by the site, we can affirm that Pham put down a few vast wagers on the amusement, actually set so far as to make various records (known as “smurfs”) singularly with the end goal of wagering on this diversion. At the time Cs:go Lounge worker Courtney “Nectar” Timpson had his suspicions and had started his own particular examination concerning the onrushing of sizable wagers encompassing the diversion. He was astounded to find that most of the huge winning wagers on that amusement prompted Pham or individuals on Pham’s Steam companions list.

[PICTURES REMOVED ON REQUEST]

 

Duc “cud” Pham, a Vietnamese student in the U.S., has been around the North American professional scene for a while and even played in LunatiK eSports when they won ESEA’s Counter-Strike: Global Offensive Main Division 15th season. He supplements his income through skins betting and trading—his Steam account advertises the sale of keys for the virtual cases that the game “drops” for players.

“He had nine smurf accounts that he controlled directly that all placed the maximum value bet that they could, yielding a return of $1193.14 value each. Some of these accounts were created specifically to bet on this match. At the time I thought it was strange because he wasn’t much of a ‘YOLO’ better. By that I mean, he would sometimes bet on the underdog but never before this much and never with his smurfs.”

After all these massacre, the latest development which revealed that the match was thrown away by iBUYPOWER intentionally as they made $ 1200 per account on their 9 smurf accounts, shocking isn’t it? Although, the management fails to answer the questions at their convenience, the screenshots thus prove that the match was intentionally lost in the concern of winning huge amounts from bettings.

The result is tedious, but affirmed that ibp are now set to loose their sponsors if more evidence becomes visible. And they also should, because of their internal strategial mischiefs, thousands of fair betters lost their valuables with no suspicion about the fixation of the match.

Interview with Ankit ‘V3nom’ Panth from Team Brutality

0

With the Indian CS:GO community growing at a rapid pace and to add to that the influx of international organisations such as ESEA to the country, the signs are encouraging for e-sports in the coming few years.

Leading the brigade of professional CS players in the country is Team Brutality’s Ankit ‘V3nom’ Panth, who has definitely raised some eyebrows, thanks to his performances in ESEA.

We sat down with CS 1.6 and GO stalwart, to understand the aesthetics of the CS:GO scene in India.

HOW DID YOU LIKE CSGO, WHEN YOU INITIALLY PLAYED IT?

I’ll be honest here. The entire team had purchased CSGO from Flipkart the day it was available for pre order. The game was delivered in a few days; we installed it, did one mission and deleted it after 20 minutes without even completing the mission because we didn’t like it that much due to the heavy graphics and the recoil pattern. Who would have thought that we’ll end up playing the same game professionally.

BRUTALITY HAS BEEN IN TOP FORM IN ESEA AND HAS BEEN BY FAR THE TOP INDIAN TEAM ONLINE. WHAT ARE THE REASONS THAT CAN BE ATTRIBUTED TO YOUR RECENT SUCCESS?

Well, thank you if we have done justice to coming close to being called as the top team online in India. But, we still have a long way to go we feel since we’ve just begun to do the damage and I’m sure soon we will be worthy of that title/compliment you gave us!

We need to work harder, which we will and in 2015 you will see what Brutality’s top form looks like. We have so far lost only the Games Arena Bengaluru tournament, which was our debut event and after that there haven’t been any major LAN events happening in India so we can’t really say we’re the top and the best yet.

As far as the reasons go, we have worked really hard as individuals as well as a team together. When I say team it doesn’t mean the playing 5, but also our super awesome back-end team, who keeps helping us every time without even asking and keeps us motivated throughout.

They are the real heroes, who have worked day & night behind the scenes and made Brutality the brand it is today. So I would like to thank these guys first starting from Mr. Shahnawaz Sayyed our Content/PR guy, Mr. Apurva More along with Mr. Anish Nemlekar, who make us look good and are from our creative team & last but not the least Mr. Sat Mayekar, who handles our marketing.

After them one of the main reasons would be the chemistry & friendship that we share between us ‘The 4 A’s’ as they call us, to an extent that has really helped us get to the spot where we are today. The experience, which RiX and astaRRRRR brought in with them helped us a lot to improve much faster.

IN CS 1.6, INDIAN TEAMS WOULDN’T EVEN COME CLOSE TO COUNTRIES SUCH AS CHINA & SOUTH KOREA, WHY DO YOU THINK WE HAVE BEEN GETTING FAR BETTER RESULTS IN CSGO?

I agree but it wasn’t our fault back then. We had talent during that time as well but in CS 1.6 there was no medium to play against these teams. You couldn’t play with them due to high ping issues whereas in CS GO 100-120 ping is also playable and that’s the reason you are seeing the improvement.

First it was match making which routed you to Singapore servers, where you could play against some of the best players from Singapore, Vietnam, China, Indonesia etc.

Now with the launch of ESEA it’s even better. We are getting the opportunity to play against some of the best teams of South East Asia because of their Asia Pacific League. So from here on you will only see improvement in the Indian players and teams because this was the stable opportunity that we needed from a long time.

HOW DIFFERENT IS IT PLAYING AGAINST ASIAN TEAMS AS COMPARED TO INDIAN TEAMS?

There is a huge difference according to me. You cannot do your random strats against these Asian teams and see if it works. You have to be well prepared in terms of your strategies & aim, because most of the time they are ready with the anti-strategies of whatever you throw at them.

I wouldn’t refrain from saying that it’s their exposure and adaptation to different game-plays they experience playing with the European teams as practice/tournament that gave them the edge.

Whereas when you are playing against Indian teams you don’t feel that pressure and most of the time you know your opponents and read them perfectly. You can do your random stuff here and try different things, because here the success rate would be much higher as compared to the Asian and European Teams.

WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THE INDIAN CSGO COMMUNITY?

Its growing and will keep growing I’m sure. The support of the fans is increasing and people are being more serious about their favourite teams.

Let me talk about my team here. Whenever we lose or win an event there are fans, who inbox us on our page to tell us what we did wrong and how should we improve the areas where we need to work and where exactly were the opponents targeting us etc.

That feeling when you know that your fans are with you and the community is supporting you no matter what is priceless.

HOW DIFFICULT WAS THE TRANSITION FROM CS 1.6 TO CS:GO?

I wouldn’t say it was difficult but it was quite a ride. We were one of the last professional teams to switch I guess and teams ahead of us had already started playing since the beginning.

We had to face a lot of issues in terms of understanding the recoil pattern, getting use to the maps, smokes & flashes etc. We were a little sceptical at the beginning but then as they say nothing is impossible and hard work pays off, that’s what we kept in mind and hopped into the scene and here we are being one of the best teams in the country.

SOME OF YOUR TEAMMATES HAVE PLAYED TOURNAMENTS ABROAD; DID YOU GET TO LEARN CERTAIN ASPECTS OF THE GAME THAT THEY LEARNT?

Yes of course as I mentioned earlier their experience helped us a lot and improved us much faster. They gave us various insights of the game and shared their experience of playing against one of the best teams in the world NIP.

They knew where we lacked and told us the areas which we need to work on as soon as possible. They taught us the basics first and told us how different this game was from CS 1.6. We never really paid attention to smokes, flashes, map control etc, but in this game these things are very important.

You cannot have any lose ends for your enemies.

WHAT ARE THE UPCOMING TOURNAMENTS FOR BRUTALITY?

There is EDGE 2015 on LAN in April in Kolkata, then there is IndiGO Online in March along with Digital Wars Online.

There are also rumours of one major LAN event happening in May, ESL-One qualifiers in June-July and ESWC in September.

HAS IT BEEN DIFFICULT FOR YOU TO MAINTAIN COUNTER STRIKE AS A CAREER?

I wouldn’t say so. I keep doing my own things on the other side so it hasn’t really affected me in that manner. And as I have personally always suggested my fellow serious gamers; if you really maintain the balance between priorities and passion, trust me they will eventually blend in and you wouldn’t have to struggle with either of them.

It has worked for me and I’m sure someone reading this out there, will help them too.

V3n0m during his Counter Strike 1.6 game at Mumbai Electronic Sports Championship

With the Indian CS:GO community growing at a rapid pace and to add to that the influx of international organisations such as ESEA to the country, the signs are encouraging for e-sports in the coming few years.

Leading the brigade of professional CS players in the country is Team Brutality’s Ankit ‘V3nom’ Panth, who has definitely raised some eyebrows, thanks to his performances in ESEA.

We sat down with CS 1.6 and GO stalwart, to understand the aesthetics of the CS:GO scene in India.

HOW DID YOU LIKE CSGO, WHEN YOU INITIALLY PLAYED IT?

I’ll be honest here. The entire team had purchased CSGO from Flipkart the day it was available for pre order. The game was delivered in a few days; we installed it, did one mission and deleted it after 20 minutes without even completing the mission because we didn’t like it that much due to the heavy graphics and the recoil pattern. Who would have thought that we’ll end up playing the same game professionally.

BRUTALITY HAS BEEN IN TOP FORM IN ESEA AND HAS BEEN BY FAR THE TOP INDIAN TEAM ONLINE. WHAT ARE THE REASONS THAT CAN BE ATTRIBUTED TO YOUR RECENT SUCCESS?

Well, thank you if we have done justice to coming close to being called as the top team online in India. But, we still have a long way to go we feel since we’ve just begun to do the damage and I’m sure soon we will be worthy of that title/compliment you gave us!

We need to work harder, which we will and in 2015 you will see what Brutality’s top form looks like. We have so far lost only the Games Arena Bengaluru tournament, which was our debut event and after that there haven’t been any major LAN events happening in India so we can’t really say we’re the top and the best yet.

As far as the reasons go, we have worked really hard as individuals as well as a team together. When I say team it doesn’t mean the playing 5, but also our super awesome back-end team, who keeps helping us every time without even asking and keeps us motivated throughout.

They are the real heroes, who have worked day & night behind the scenes and made Brutality the brand it is today. So I would like to thank these guys first starting from Mr. Shahnawaz Sayyed our Content/PR guy, Mr. Apurva More along with Mr. Anish Nemlekar, who make us look good and are from our creative team & last but not the least Mr. Sat Mayekar, who handles our marketing.

After them one of the main reasons would be the chemistry & friendship that we share between us ‘The 4 A’s’ as they call us, to an extent that has really helped us get to the spot where we are today. The experience, which RiX and astaRRRRR brought in with them helped us a lot to improve much faster.

IN CS 1.6, INDIAN TEAMS WOULDN’T EVEN COME CLOSE TO COUNTRIES SUCH AS CHINA & SOUTH KOREA, WHY DO YOU THINK WE HAVE BEEN GETTING FAR BETTER RESULTS IN CSGO?

I agree but it wasn’t our fault back then. We had talent during that time as well but in CS 1.6 there was no medium to play against these teams. You couldn’t play with them due to high ping issues whereas in CS GO 100-120 ping is also playable and that’s the reason you are seeing the improvement.

First it was match making which routed you to Singapore servers, where you could play against some of the best players from Singapore, Vietnam, China, Indonesia etc.

Now with the launch of ESEA it’s even better. We are getting the opportunity to play against some of the best teams of South East Asia because of their Asia Pacific League. So from here on you will only see improvement in the Indian players and teams because this was the stable opportunity that we needed from a long time.

HOW DIFFERENT IS IT PLAYING AGAINST ASIAN TEAMS AS COMPARED TO INDIAN TEAMS?

There is a huge difference according to me. You cannot do your random strats against these Asian teams and see if it works. You have to be well prepared in terms of your strategies & aim, because most of the time they are ready with the anti-strategies of whatever you throw at them.

I wouldn’t refrain from saying that it’s their exposure and adaptation to different game-plays they experience playing with the European teams as practice/tournament that gave them the edge.

Whereas when you are playing against Indian teams you don’t feel that pressure and most of the time you know your opponents and read them perfectly. You can do your random stuff here and try different things, because here the success rate would be much higher as compared to the Asian and European Teams.

WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS ON THE INDIAN CSGO COMMUNITY?

Its growing and will keep growing I’m sure. The support of the fans is increasing and people are being more serious about their favourite teams.

Let me talk about my team here. Whenever we lose or win an event there are fans, who inbox us on our page to tell us what we did wrong and how should we improve the areas where we need to work and where exactly were the opponents targeting us etc.

That feeling when you know that your fans are with you and the community is supporting you no matter what is priceless.

HOW DIFFICULT WAS THE TRANSITION FROM CS 1.6 TO CS:GO?

I wouldn’t say it was difficult but it was quite a ride. We were one of the last professional teams to switch I guess and teams ahead of us had already started playing since the beginning.

We had to face a lot of issues in terms of understanding the recoil pattern, getting use to the maps, smokes & flashes etc. We were a little sceptical at the beginning but then as they say nothing is impossible and hard work pays off, that’s what we kept in mind and hopped into the scene and here we are being one of the best teams in the country.

SOME OF YOUR TEAMMATES HAVE PLAYED TOURNAMENTS ABROAD; DID YOU GET TO LEARN CERTAIN ASPECTS OF THE GAME THAT THEY LEARNT?

Yes of course as I mentioned earlier their experience helped us a lot and improved us much faster. They gave us various insights of the game and shared their experience of playing against one of the best teams in the world NIP.

They knew where we lacked and told us the areas which we need to work on as soon as possible. They taught us the basics first and told us how different this game was from CS 1.6. We never really paid attention to smokes, flashes, map control etc, but in this game these things are very important.

You cannot have any lose ends for your enemies.

WHAT ARE THE UPCOMING TOURNAMENTS FOR BRUTALITY?

There is EDGE 2015 on LAN in April in Kolkata, then there is IndiGO Online in March along with Digital Wars Online.

There are also rumours of one major LAN event happening in May, ESL-One qualifiers in June-July and ESWC in September.

HAS IT BEEN DIFFICULT FOR YOU TO MAINTAIN COUNTER STRIKE AS A CAREER?

I wouldn’t say so. I keep doing my own things on the other side so it hasn’t really affected me in that manner. And as I have personally always suggested my fellow serious gamers; if you really maintain the balance between priorities and passion, trust me they will eventually blend in and you wouldn’t have to struggle with either of them.

It has worked for me and I’m sure someone reading this out there, will help them too.

383

WITHOUT DELVING INTO THE SALARY, IS THE MONEY EARNED FROM CS ENOUGH TO SUSTAIN YOURSELF?

Not at all. The money earned from CS as of now for me can never be enough because there is no fixed amount or tournament schedule which we follow every year. But it will happen this year, I am guessing because 2015 looks a promising year for CSGO.

WHICH IS THE BEST MOMENT OF YOUR CAREER?

It will always be the Gameeks 1.0 at the Chitkara University in Jalandhar where we defeated A+e.gaming and won the event.

This was the event that got us recognition and some serious fan following. We were brutals that night in our gameplay and our approach, maybe this has struck the fire and has been burning since then.

WHO DO YOU THINK WILL WIN ESL KATOWICE?

According to me, I will follow my heart and it says go with the Ninjas (NiP) or Virtus.pro. So I am supporting them both.

WHERE DO YOU SEE E-SPORTS & CSGO IN INDIA IN THE NEXT 5 YEARS?

A very good question and a very open ended one so I’d like to answer this with a thought. ‘The future is an opportunity’ – J.F.Ware. CSGO revolution has just begun and as we all have seen it has taken the gaming world with a storm. Out of nowhere we are one of the largest communities of fans and followers any game has ever seen. The question that remains in front of us is, what do we do with it and from here?

“India has one of the most active Counter Strike communities in the world”

India for the very first time has been actively involved in taking CSGO to a whole new EPIC level.

I truly hope that sponsors/organisers/companies do take keen interest in bringing up some massive events and tournaments for the gamers because India is a huge fan base and let’s not forget we are passionate in whatever we do.

So am not seeing the CSGO craze die anytime sooner, but only elevating to a whole new level in the coming times. I just pray the resources are available when we really need them in time to promote this beautiful game that we have been so attached to. 5 years is a long time, I know and feel our fellow gamers are crazy enough to get to work this instant and give back to the CSGO community every way possible.

On that Brutal note, I’d like to thank everyone that have and haven’t supported us, we will do everything we can in our capacity to create awareness and do as much we can for CSGO!! Keep the love and support flowing. Thanks!!

ANY LAST SHOUT OUTS BEFORE WE END THIS?

Yes, I would like to thank all our sponsors Gunnar Optiks, Antec & Zotac for going out of the way and supporting us. Last but not the least our magnificent 5,496 BRUTALS on facebook who have always been there with us no matter what. Keep supporting & stay BRUTAL!

kHRYSTAL, Threat return to Counter Strike with Team Acer

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Former Lions Counter Strike 1.6 pair, Bjorn ‘threat’ Pers and Frej “kHRYSTAL” Sjostorm have entered the competitive CS:GO scene with Team Acer. The Germany based organisation had already dropped hints of moving to GO, in January.

Both the 1.6 stalwarts have also been a part of some big organisation, threat was a part of the fnatic in the first half of 2010, whereas Khrystal was in SK Gaming.

kHRYSTAL has previously tried his hand at competitive CS:GO with teams such as Begrip and Reason. He told Acer, “I first of all want to say that this is AMAZING! The guys and I have been waiting for this moment for a long time, it’s a huge relief to finally go official. By joining Team Acer it feels like we really can focus on our game instead of things surrounding it. It’s soon time for us to show the community what we really can do, but we got a few things yet to fix. Luckily we’ve got a month until our first offline appearance, so we should be all set by then.”

Team Acer are

Björn “threat” Pers
Fredrik “slap” Junbrant
Frej “kHRYSTAL” Sjöström
John “wenton” Eriksson
Christian “Spitfire” Schiölde

Jerry “vetic” Fors (coach)

Interview with former fnatic head of content Elroy Pinto

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Indian eSports is looking to go to the next level and the return of former Fnatic Creative Director, Elroy Pinto to India might just help the country add more professionalism into the ever- growing community.

From his travels across Europe, Pinto speaks about how the Indian scene can adapt over time, to become a powerhouse in the years to come. He spoke to TalkEsport in an exclusive interview.

HOW DID THE FNATIC OPPORTUNITY COME UP?

The Fnatic opportunity came up because I was moving out of the old-MYM in 2007 and I was looking to take up something similar to MYM, i.e. team management and content. When I left MYM I was looking to continue my growth in eSports, I had been approached by one of the owners of Fnatic in the past and I did not want to leave MYM back then. So I reached out to them and a few other places but with Fnatic after a few discussions it was clear that I’d move to Fnatic and continue working in eSports there. After that I’ve not looked back.

SINCE YOU HAVE RETURNED TO INDIA AFTER A HIATUS, WHAT ARE THE CHANGES YOU’VE SEEN IN THE INDIAN E-SPORTS SCENE?

Well I used to visit India once a year but yeah it’s been 5 years since I actually stayed in India and the changes have been massive, not just since I started out 12 years ago playing WarCraft 3. I can see there’s a LOT more people from the ‘real world’ looking to find in-roads into eSports to try and monetize it, but people with the faintest idea of what to do or have their heart in the wrong place.

On the positive side it’s probably the best time to be playing games, and am quite confident of how the market is going to grow, just by pure numbers we’re going to become one of the biggest nations in eSports in the next 5 years.

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ARE YOU PLANNING ON GETTING INVOLVED IN THE INDIAN E-SPORTS SCENE?

I definitely would love to! I’ve had some conversations with some really spirited individuals who seem very eager to grow the scene here. I am more than willing to offer my expertise and experience to help gamers grow and organisations grow. I’ve spent 8 years building up one of the biggest brands in eSports and I am very eager to see our own scene develop.

THE INDIAN GAMING CARNIVAL WAS A BUMP IN INDIA’S GROWTH TRAJECTORY, WERE THERE ANY EUROPEAN/NA TEAMS THAT HAVE JUDGED THE SCENE BASED ON THAT?

Without going into specifics, it’s always there on most people’s minds, it is actually one of the more bleak aspects of Indian eSports internationally but what can we do? Look at the positive, the benchmark has been set so low that the sky is the limit now.

YOU HANDLED MOST OF THE CONTENT, HOW WAS THE EXPERIENCE?

I used to handle all content on Fnatic before my departure and yes I’ve handled all kinds of content on fnatic; social media, website, sponsor work, videos. The experience has taught me a lot and more importantly I am very confident in my skills in conceiving the best possible content for eSports.

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WHAT IS THE PERCEPTION OF E-SPORTS AMONG THE PEOPLE THERE AS COMPARED TO INDIA?

eSports is now cool in many ways, it’s honestly an amazing feeling going to Wembley Arena in London to a sold out eSports audience, there to watch LCS.

CS:GO AND DOTA 2 HAVE BEEN DRAWING SIGNIFICANT NUMBER OF INDIAN PLAYERS, WHAT IS REQUIRED TO MAKE IT A SPECTATOR SPORT IN THE COUNTRY?

I am still conflicted in my own view of this, I used to think that TV is the next step in making eSports big in Asia, but with the way our country is developing when it comes to internet penetration I am quite confident that even live streaming can be a big factor in our growth in terms of spectatorship. More importantly we need to have world class LAN events, quality has to increase.

HOW MUCH LEGITIMACY FOR E-SPORTS IS THERE IN EUROPE?

Well there are eSport bars in Europe called the Meltdown Bars (look them up!). Consuming alcohol is probably a national pastime in the UK. There’s plenty of support provided by the Swedish government for people setting up eSport organisations there. The Berlin municipality helped a lot of the LCS teams when they were moving from Cologne to Berlin. Don’t get me wrong, people still give you a look if you play too many games but it’s become a bit more accepted. It also helps that Valve & Riot drive their games forward, this was different from 10 years ago where leagues organised by the developer were non-existent.

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DO YOU THINK INDIAN E-SPORTS HAS TALENT THAT CAN MAKE IT TO THE INTERNATIONAL LEVEL?

Of course, we just have to give all of them a platform to perform.

WHERE DO YOU SEE INDIAN ESPORTS IN 10 YEARS TIME?

In, 10 years India will be one of the biggest nations for eSports. Unless we mess up big time.