Valve Corporation, the developer behind Counter-Strike, recently announced an impending overhaul of its Counter-Strike esports, aiming to reset the field and prioritize talent over business relationships. This would align with the new Counter-Strike 2 and its future competitive events once it comes out.
The company expressed concerns over the diminishing accessibility to top-tier competition, noting the increasing influence of business ties in professional Counter-Strike. As part of its mission to ensure that esports remain as open as traditional sports, Valve outlined several sweeping changes to its esports events, aiming to create an environment where skill alone will determine a team’s success.
“Counter-Strike is at its best when teams compete on a level playing field and when the ability is the only limit to their success,” the company stated, pinpointing the problems in the current ecosystem. “The ecosystem has become gradually less open, with access to the highest levels of competition increasingly gated by business relationships.”
Valve is introducing new requirements for running large-scale competitive events to counter this trend. Although the finer details are still in progress, the company has shared broad aspects of these new rules.
- Tournament organizers will no longer have unique business relationships or other conflicts of interest with teams that participate in their events.
- Invitations to all tournaments will use our ranking system (detailed here), or otherwise be determined by open qualifiers.
- Any compensation for participating teams—prize pool or otherwise—will be made public and will be driven by objective criteria that can be inspected by the community.
These reforms are set to take effect in 2025, acknowledging existing long-term commitments by tournament organizers. Valve anticipates some challenges during the transition but remains committed to the long-term health of Counter-Strike as a sport.
“Since tournament organizers have existing long term commitments, these requirements will take effect as of 2025. There will be some rough edges to the transition, but we’re committed to the long-term health of Counter-Strike as a sport and are looking forward to its bright and open future,” Valve concluded.
With these sweeping changes, Valve aims to return to the spirit of competition that Counter-Strike was built on and create an open and vibrant future for the esports scene.