People Make Games has returned with another deep dive into the seedy underbelly of gaming, this time taking aim at Valve and CS:GO. According to their report, Valve is complicit in a gambling empire that funnels millions of dollars into its pockets and preys on gambling addicts and underage children.

The story goes into great detail about CS:GO skin gambling sites and how they skirt the law. Just recently, a class-action lawsuit brought against Valve by the parents of several children who lost thousands on CS:GO skin gambling sites was dismissed, largely because lootboxes and skin gambling isn't considered gambling. And while Valve has taken some action to limit the worst offenses associated with CS:GO, it hasn't kept up policing its game for illegal activity.

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In 2015, Valve banned several CS:GO players for match fixing in order to win money betting against themselves on CS:GO gambling sites, which also allow players to make bets on professional matches. That was back in 2015, however, and since then, Valve hasn't thrown out enough bans to keep the practice from coming back.

Today, "match fixing doesn't just still happen in CS:GO, it's an open secret," reported People Make Games. According to Viper, who played for Dr. Pepper and AGO NEST, "There is so much of it. I know people who have done it. I've played against people who have done it. It's so common nowadays still."

And it’s not just match fixing where CS:GO players are getting caught performing nefarious deeds. In 2016, several CS:GO streamers were busted for playing on CS:GO skin gambling sites, broadcasting big wins to their millions of subscribers in order to advertise for sites that they either owned or were secretly affiliated with. Those streams were rigged so that the streamer would always win, making it seem like these sites were both fun and lucrative.

A noted example in the summer of 2016 involved Tom "Syndicate" Castle and Trevor "T-Martin" Martin on the site CS:GO Lotto. After getting caught as the owners of said site, they faced a class-action lawsuit. Unfortunately, that suit was later dropped in 2017.

Others got busted as well, but many sites continue to operate to this day, and there’s no telling how many streams are rigged or professional CS:GO matches are being fixed to this day.

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