Today is the 25th anniversary of Counter-Strike.
The official Counter-Strike Twitter account shared this message:
“Happy 25th birthday to the greatest video game ever made, Counter-Strike.
A Half-Life mod which has spawned communities, created memories, and established the greatest esport of them all. We’re grateful to have the most passionate players in gaming.
Here’s to 25 more!”
As noted by Valve themselves, the original Counter-Strike was not a standalone game, but a mod for Half-Life developed by university students Minh Le and his friend Jess Cliffe. Le originally made mods of id software’s Quake, but when he heard that Valve would release the SDK for Half-Life’s engine GoldSrc, he took a chance and started making character models, even before that SDK went public.
Le did most of the programming, and subsequently came up with the terrorists vs counter-terrorists theme, inspired by Rainbow Six and the first Spec Ops games, decades before the seminal and delisted Spec Ops The Line. Le would get Cliffe on board to help manage the community, and particularly became a contact person to fans who would help make its levels.
Le and Cliffe published 5 betas of Counter-Strike, starting in June 1999, before Valve approached them in 2000. Le and Cliffe agreed to sell the Counter-Strike IP and be hired by Valve to continue work on the game. Le would keep working on Counter-Strike until it reached Version 1.0, released in November 2000. He then started work on a Counter-Strike 2.0, yes, in the year 2000!
Of course, as we know, this Counter-Strike 2.0 would never release, as Valve cancelled the project in favor of continuing support of the first title by building a new dev team. Le left Valve and continues to work in the industry, with his most recent notable work being Facepunch Studios’ Rust. He is now working at Korean game studio Pearl Abyss on an unannounced title.
Of course, with the benefit of hindsight, we now know that Valve eventually did release Counter-Strike 2 last year. It only took twenty three years, an upgraded modern day Source 2 engine, and seven other releases, to arrive before the official number two, but we’re finally here.
Perhaps signaling Valve’s successful transition to modern gaming, Counter-Strike 2 was well received by critics but negatively reviewed by the gamers themselves. And the gamers have multiple valid complaints, such as the drop in MacOS support, and delisting of all the content gamers bought in Counter-Strike Global Offensive, some of whom spent thousands on it.
But Counter-Strike 2 continues to have an active and loyal player base. The end of 2023 saw the title become the Valve game with the lowest user review score on Steam, and to have also generated $ 1 billion in revenue. For better or worse, this is the new normal of the game industry, and Valve continues to be at the forefront of it.