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CS2: Valve Bans Closed Leagues

Jul 25, 2023Jul 25, 2023

After talks have been held in June, Valve bans closed leagues from 2025 onwards, attempting to create a "level playing field". This will affect current tournament organizers such as Blast and ESL, both of whom have already responded to Valve's changes.

In recent years, Counter Strike: Global Offensive has been growing massively. Not only in player numbers, but also financially. Since CS:GO's release in October 2012, tournaments have become more frequent and bigger and filled with a mouthwatering amount of cash in the prize pools.

Multiple tournament organizers fought for the biggest teams to play in their events, even going as far as to found their own closed leagues, for which organizations could buy slots to participate against the best teams in the world.

In 2019, Valve addressed the matter of exclusive deals in a blog post, stating:

Valve wants their first-person shooter to stay on a competitive and level playing field, so that the esports scene can grow. But where this much money is, exclusive business deals aren't far away. With ESL and Blast founding their own Leagues (Pro League and Premier respectively) in the last couple of years, the big teams with plenty of cash bought themselves into these leagues to compete against the best and for an even bigger amount of money.

This comes at the cost of smaller and less wealthy teams who aren't able to afford their own spot in these top-tier leagues

After talks between Valve, ESL and Blast at the last CS:GO Major Tournament in June, as reported by Richard Lewis, Valve issued a statement yesterday titled A level playing field in which Counter Strike's publisher reveals its plans for maintaining the integrity of the game and allowing the competitive scene to grow and improve as a whole. Valve are adding the following requirements for tournament organizers to obey to:

This means that Valve is banning franchise-leagues and leagues with invitations that don't align with the team's recent performances. Valve will use its regional standings list to determine whether an invitation is based on performances or not. Furthermore, the earnings from teams participating in events will be made public. This will also include sticker sales, a requirement the community loves to see.

But until we get the new rule set, we have to wait a few more years. ESL's Pro League deal, the Louvre Agreement, was extended to 2025 in January last year. Valve acknowledged these long-term commitments by pushing the rules back until 2025 and not introducing them with Counter Strike 2 as planned.

The tournament organizers have already responded to Valve's policy change for Counter Strike 2. Ulrich Schulze, SVP Game Ecosystems for the ESL Faceit Group tweeted:

The changes Valve announced to the CS ecosystem will come into play in 2025.All competitions will be based on ranking/qualifiers from 2025 on. Implementing the vision Valve shared with us, we've been working on adjustments to our events (our flagships are already there).

The Blast Premier Twitter account posted the following statement:

pic.twitter.com/WCEFiTZkId

From the statements, it can be read that Blast and ESL will continue to host tournaments in Counter Strike and follow Valve's new rules. From then on, tournaments will either be filled with teams from the top of Valve's ranking list, or we can enjoy some do-or-die games in the qualifiers before the main event even starts. Sounds amazing if you ask me.

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After talks have been held in June, Valve bans closed leagues from 2025 onwards, attempting to create a "level playing field". This will affect current tournament organizers such as Blast and ESL, both of whom have already responded to Valve's changes.