Counter-Strike is finally getting a feature it should have had years ago
And the community's response 💝is overwhelmingly positive

澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Counter-Strike 2 will fina🌞lly offer players the chance to refund their weapoꦅns if they buy them in error.
Last night, Valve detailed a substantial update to the game ahead of its release date later this summer. A𝔉s well as dedic🌌ated weapon loadouts, more accurate interaction with destructible elements of the map, and molotov cocktails cook any chickens unfortunate enough to be caught in the blast, the tweet below confirms weapon refunds.
Bought the wrong thing? Meant ജto buy a different weapon, armor, or grenade? Sell your purchase back and buy again (during buy time). pic.twitter.com/7KJ4WN82XU
Right now, CS:GO has a strict no refunds policy. If you buy an item in error, you're either stuck with it, or forced to buy a different weapon on top of 🍒the one you've already got - far from an ideal s🧸trategy in an economy-driven shooter.
That's the opposite of what Valorant offers. Arguably Counter-Strike's only real competition in the tactical shooter space, Riot's FPS has offered weapon refunds since launch. Valorant's entire buy menu is a lot more forgiving than Valve's, part of a suite of changes that aimed to set the FPS apart from its biggest inspiration. That's made swapping between the two games an interesting experience, particularly on the occasions where two Counter-Strike player𝔍s each buy a gun for a single teammate.
The response to the change has been almost universally positive, with the replies celebrating an end to wasted in-game cash. The only real n𝓡egative responses stem from fans uncertain about Valorant's influence on Counter-Strike, but given that the newer game was born almost directly out of Valve's shooter, I think tꦇhat's likely to not be a major concern for most players.
Fix your aim with our list of the 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:best FPS games.
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