At the time of writing, Counter-Strike 2 has 7.5 million reviews on Steam, 88% of which are positive. That's pretty good going for a game that released less than 24 hours ago.
Except, of course, that the vast majority of those reviews are for Counter-Strike: Global Offensive, a game that is no longer playable. If you filter the reviews to just yesterday and today, you'll find that there have been 3450 of them, just 59% of which are positive, which would give Counter-Strike 2 a rating of "Mixed".
That "mixed" rating would spell trouble for most newly launched multiplayer games, but Counter-Strike 2's overall and recent review averages remain "very positive" thanks to that long history of positive reviews about CS:GO.
Given the games are so similar, then perhaps CS2 supplanting the Steam page of its predecessor is reasonable. I'm unconvinced, however.
I think it's a question of degree. You may boot up Counter-Strike 2 this week and feel that nothing has changed, or that some things have changed but everything you valued is still present. Or, as Edwin wrote about earlier today, you may find that it no longer runs for you at all because CS2 doesn't have Mac support and CS:GO did. You may find the new minimum specs exclude your computer, or that it's simply less comfortable to play because left-handed weapons have been removed. You may find that your favourite mode - the one that prompted you to spend all that money opening in-game crates - has disappeared overnight.
Valve themselves obviously feel as if the changes between the two games are significant. They have, after all, called this Counter-Strike 2 and not CS:GO 1.6. In that context, it just seems bizarre to me that when I go to Counter-Strike 2's Steam page, the
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