Counter-Strike 2 has received an update that implements a handful of bug fixes and UI improvements. While a new update is almost always a welcome addition, Counter-Strike 2 fans continue to wait for a major one that addresses some of the game's more significant issues.
Counter-Strike 2 released in September of last year and, unsurprisingly, attracted tons of players right off the bat. Although the game's player base is perfectly healthy with an average of over 900,000 concurrent Steam users during the last 30 days, there are still some drawbacks in Valve's newest FPS like stability issues, lackluster support for community servers, and a lack of official casual modes seen in the series' previous title. While Valve likely plans to address at least some of these issues in future updates, CS2's newest patch solves other problems.
Counter-Strike 2's April 16 update fixes two bugs, one that caused the bomb to sometimes disappear from the radar and another that caused Workshop tools to crash when compiling maps. As for UI improvements, the first one allows users to select the sticker icon underneath a weapon to scrape or remove stickers, and the other lets users delete empty storage units that have an assigned label. The minor update comes in at just over 30 MB. Many in the Counter-Strike community responded to the patch with the classic empty fridge GIF that suggests disappointment, with most being unsurprised that it was only a minor update.
Counter-Strike 2's major updates have so far been pretty rare and hard to predict, with the last one coming in late February. That update adjusted how spawn locations work in a variety of maps, fixed lots of bugs, and introduced other minor improvements. As the successor to one of the greatest FPS games of all time, it's basically a certainty that CS2 will continue receiving major updates in the future; it's just a matter of when and how often.
After the initial hype surrounding CS2's launch died down, the franchise experienced a dip
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