But if this were court, hed be considered guilty based solely on AZKs testimony and him clearly not trying in the game. Itd be a different story if he denied claims of throwing and if AZK never spoke out against him. Youre just blindly denying everything because u wanna believe what u want. U think witness testimonies mean nothing? Thats clearly evidence. And if AZK were to tesify against SKA in a court case, it would be evidence since he was THERE to not only witness it, but knew everyones intentions as well. But do they even know what the fuck to look for? Why does riot strictly forbid that shit but valve allows it? Does riot know about technical possibilites that valve doesn't?" Sure: ESL stores it for a couple of days to "check" it. What I don't understand: in counter strike pros are allowed to bring in their own gear. He hits button B -> vibrator in flushas right shoe is vibrating. Vibrator in flushas left shoe is vibrating. He hits A if someone is going to push bombsite A. Imagine this: a team has someone in the audience. They also have metal detectors at the LCS stages which they don't use at CS stages (to my knowledge). In the LCS teams/players tell Riot which gear they want to use (for example mouse one, keyboard x and headset xyz). I'd love to know why Riot games doesn't allow pro players to bring in their own gear to pro League matches (LCS). "The big question is: If there are cheats - how? It's pretty easy when you can bring whatever you want with you on stage. "While bans can be disruptive and painful to some members of the community, they are sometimes necessary." "We will continue to take whatever action we think is necessary to protect the entertainment value created by professional Counter-Strike, including, on occasion, terminating our relationship with individuals who have demonstrated a willingness to exploit their fans’ faith in the integrity of the sport. "To clarify, the bans for these players are permanent, and players proven to have taken part in match-fixing will be permanently banned," Valve wrote. Robin "GMX" Stahmer and Joey "fxy0" Schlosser - two of Epsilon's players involved in the scandal - recently returned to action and joined professional teams, while some of the ex-iBP members competed at small offline tournaments in 2015.īut these players' hopes of ever attending a major again have now been quashed by Valve, which, in a blog post, declared that all those who have been found guilty of match-fixing are banned for life, in order to ensure that the integrity of top-flight competition "can never be called into question." When announcing these bans, Valve stated that the restrictions would "not be re-evaluated before 2016", which many interpreted as a sign that match-fixing suspensions could eventually be lifted. Months later, a similar case rocked the French scene as four of Epsilon's players were found guilty of profiting from an ESEA Invite match. Four ex-members of iBP are permanently banned
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