What's amazing is how nobody can see his obvious cheating. It even seems to key (scope) in differently depending what gun he has. typically he has a range set on the cheat so it doesn't turn on people very far away. The turning action alerts him that there is an enemy. He presses a keybind of some sort when he is moving around and it turns his character to the next enemy. He uses a bot to detect where the enemy is. His main hack is what is called a "info lock" or a "aim lock". In fact most of the cheating is done way before the kill and the aimbot is used very cautiously, typically he only uses it, when he really wants to win the game, and someone got the jump on im. But it's not how you detect a cheater entirely. Yes that is very indicative of his aimbot. The 15 Biggest Steroid, P.E.D., and Doping Scandals in Sports HistoryĬheats are easily detected, for some reason everyone looks for the "snap". It's why many sports require drug testing. It's rampant in the past few decades from Lance Armstrong to Mark McGwire to Ben Johnson. Not to mention how idiotic would it be to risk this career he has built himself on Twitch to cheat when he already is in the top 0.1% of PC shooter players in the world.To pretend that top athletes don't use illegal shortcuts is unreasonable. The guy was a top NA talent in the biggest FPS eSport. It would seem naive to believe that someone wouldn't use illegal advantages to become the second-highest rated Twitch streamer ( Top 100 Twitch Streamers Sorted by Followers - Socialblade Twitch Stats | Twitch Statistics), and make millions of dollars annually. Further, pro CS:GO players don't have Shroud's aimbot-like aiming skills. Pro CS:GO players make nowhere near this kind of money. TL DR: $965,511.12 annually just from Twitch subs-and NOT including sponsors, YouTube, donations, etc. Here's another analysis of how much Shroud makes. Source: These Streamers Make Millions In A Year - Here's How The article goes on to note that Shroud makes millions in subs, donations and sponsorships. "We can only go off of speculation here, but streamers could easily make an extra $100,000 per month from good sponsorship deals." If a big streamer streams for 5 days a week, that’s an extra $20,000 month at the minimum." "From what we can gather, the big streamers usually make $1,000-$5,000 a day from donations. "People like Shroud, Summit1G, and Ninja easily make $100,000 plus from subscribers alone." Of course they do, and there are hundreds of examples. I find it unconvincing when people argue that top performers don't cheat because they're already near the top. There are dozens of YouTube vids of cheaters caught and banned while streaming on their Twitch accounts. The vast majority of games aren't even covered in that list, and it doesn't cover non-professional gamers, e.g. Banned players - Liquipedia Counter-Strike Wiki The 15 Biggest Steroid, P.E.D., and Doping Scandals in Sports Historyĭo virtual "athletes" cheat? Yes, and there are countless examples spanning decades from Billy Mitchell and Todd Rogers to "Clara." Here's a few hundred examples primarily from the 4 years, 2013-2016, and it only covers Valve games like Counter Strike et al. To pretend that top athletes don't use illegal shortcuts is unreasonable. Just wondering what the hacking community thought.
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