Cheating 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:is a problem 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:in a lot of games, 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:including CS:GO. Valve does the best they can to keep cheating to a minimum, but the problem persists partly because cheat progr👍ams are so widespread.
YouTuber ScriptKid actually uses that problem to make hilarious videos of how he trolls potential hackers. He rose to YouTube fame by , a game that got so overrun with cheaters 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:that it nearly self-destructed. The fake cheat program would cause PUBG players to kill themselves or t🌳eammates in hilarious ways like jumping out of a moving car or dropping grenades inst🐎ead of throwing them.
After that video got 1.3 million views, fans demanded that ScriptKid make another version for 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Counter-Strike: Global Offensive. So he dﷺid. And now we get to laugh at the results.
Like before, ScriptKid's fake software causes the users to experience a lot of self-defeating behaviors. For example, grenades can only be thrown straight down, causing self-immolation, and various triggers will cause the player to throw their weapons away instead of firing them. There's also a reverse aimbot where the players' crosshairs move away from opponents rather than to♓wards them, and another script that causes players 💯to automatically fire whenever their crosshair moves over a friendly.
Perhaps best of all is the virtual tripwire that will cause a player's movement settiꦚngs to max out for a few seconds, making their avatars completely flip out in-game.
ScriptKid even went so far as to spend his own cash to have Google advertise his cheat software whenever someone searched for CS:GO cheats. This caused hi꧅s software to become so widespread that he had quite a few clips to choose from when making his video.
It’s been just a few days, but ScripKid’s video has already achieved over half a million views. We suspect this is going to be another success story. Maybe next time we’ll get a fake Fortnite or VALORANT hack.
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