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  • At the beginning of 1999, two game developers, named Minh Le and Jess Cliffe, wanted to create

  • a game centered on the conflict between terrorism and counter-terrorism. Eventually they decided

  • to create a mod for the recently released game Half-Life. On June 19, 1999 the first

  • public beta was released and the gaming community absolutely loved it. So much so that the two

  • developers didn't even have to make any maps themselves. Because right from the beginning,

  • fans would simply submit their own through the official website. Popular fan created

  • maps like Dust, Siege, Nuke, among others became essential parts of the game's early

  • development. In other words, Counter-Strike was a major success. Valve, the creators of

  • Half-Life, quickly took an interest in the mod and by Beta v4.0 began assisting the developers.

  • By the end of 2000, Valve had actually hired the developers and released Counter-Strike

  • as a stand alone game. The franchise quickly grew in popularity to become one of the most

  • popular first-person shooters on the market. Even today, the original Counter-Strike is

  • among the most popular games on Steam with the most recent installment, Global Offensive,

  • at the very top.

  • It's possible that the Counter-Strike series is a prequel to the Left 4 Dead franchise.

  • You see, a few areas and maps in the Left 4 Dead games can also be found in Counter-Strike:

  • Global Offensive. The maps are of course remade but the resemblance is still quite obvious

  • at times. These overlaps can be found throughout the game and it makes you wonder if the two

  • series are actually part of the same universe. I mean, if this was any other game developer we

  • would be calling them lazy, but hey it's Valve so...

  • Yay!

  • So the question is, is this just asset recycling or actual hints towards something more?

  • Much like the arcade version of Half-Life 2, Counter-Strike: Neo is the arcade version

  • of Counter-Strike. Released sometime in 2003, the game is only available in Japan and is

  • some form of futuristic shooter with cyborgs and anime looking characters and yeah.. Basically

  • a reskinned version of the game made to appeal to a Japanese audience. Three other spin-off

  • titles has been made as well titled Counter-Strike: Online 1 and 2, and Counter-Strike Nexon: Zombies.

  • In 2009, a small Counter-Strike tournament between the two Russian teams Virtus.pro and

  • ForZe was held in Russia. The event promised a night of competitive gaming between two

  • highly ranked eSport teams. But the sponsors of the event had a slightly different idea.

  • They decided to make things a little more interesting by secretly inviting a couple

  • of strippers to see if the players would get distracted. The women did all they could but

  • the competition went on as usual and the players seemed completely unfazed.

  • Well maybe not completely.

  • I guess Counter-Strike players are just really dedicated to the sport.

  • The names of some of the bots in the games are actually named after real people. For

  • example, on hard difficulty there's a bot named Gabe as a homage to Gabe Newell. There's

  • also a bot named Dave after the creator of maps like Dust, Dust II, and Cobble. In expert

  • mode, two bots can be found named Minh and Cliffe as a reference to the original developers.

  • On normal, there's a bot named Chris who's named

  • after the creator of maps like Aztec, Inferno, and Frantic.

  • Has a player in a game ever made you so angry that you wanted to actually kill that person

  • in real life? Back in 2010, a man in France decided to play some Counter-Strike. One particular

  • match ended with him being killed in a knife fight. The man got so angry by this that he

  • decided to spend the next 7 months tracking this guy down. When he finally found out who

  • he was and where he lived he traveled to his house and when he opened the door, he stabbed

  • him in the chest with a knife. Luckily for the victim, he missed his heart by a few centimeters,

  • so he survived the attack. But seriously, how do you go seven months without thinking

  • "You know what? Maybe I'm overreacting here. Maybe I'm just overreacting a bit."

  • "Maybe I should think this through?"

  • No?

  • Seven months, still doing this?

  • Ok...

  • On the highly popular map Dust II, you can find this piece of graffiti that reads Goose.

  • This isn't exactly a secret since the area is often referred to as just Goose. But not

  • everyone knows why though. Goose is actually a reference to one of the creators of the

  • original mod, Minh Le, whose online nickname is Gooseman.

  • In 2007, a student at a school in Texas was suspended simply because he created a Counter-Strike

  • map based on his school. This happened in the wake of the Virginia Tech shooting where

  • 32 people where killed. Because of the heightened sense of fear caused by this, schools around

  • the country were on high alert for any suspicious activity. So when teachers realized that a

  • student had created a level in a game where the objective is to fight terrorists and planting

  • bombs, things got out of hand pretty quickly. Police got involved and it was seen as some

  • sort of minor act of terrorism but the boy was never actually arrested. He was however,

  • kicked out of the school and was forced to transfer to a new one. All because of some

  • poor timing and a harmless map in a video game.

  • All the radio commands and dialogue heard in each installment

  • was recorded by co-creator Jess Cliffe. It wasn't until Global Offensive that each faction

  • received their own unique voice actors.

  • Thus replacing most of the originals. But not all though. For example, the final messages like

  • or

  • still remain.

  • In Counter-Strike: Source on the map Inferno, there's a room dubbed the boiler room or just

  • boiler for short. In Global Offensive, they either forgot or choose not to include this

  • room and players quickly noticed. So in late 2014, Valve updated the game to include this

  • boiler. This created a minor outcry within the community as players thought it was kinda

  • strange that Valve would update something as trivial as this while still not fixing

  • many bugs in the game. This escalated even further when the map received yet another

  • update where they removed the boiler again and instead placed it here, in this pickup

  • truck. This turn of events quickly turned into a sort of running joke or meme if you

  • will, and the boiler has since been found on other maps as well.

At the beginning of 1999, two game developers, named Minh Le and Jess Cliffe, wanted to create

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