• Skip to main content
  • Skip to header right navigation
  • Skip to site footer
Gameranx

Gameranx

Video Game News, Lists & Guides

  • News
  • Features
  • Platforms
    • Xbox Series X
    • PS5
    • Nintendo
  • Videos
  • Upcoming Games
  • Guides

Valve to End CSGO Gambling Websites

July 13, 2016 by Nick Monroe

“We are going to start sending notices to these sites requesting they cease operations through Steam, and further pursue the matter as necessary.”

GABEN

Valve announces a formal crackdown on CSGO gambling websites and other related content. The notice was posted just recently on Valve’s news page. Below is the entire post in full, written and released by Erik Johnson.

In 2011, we added a feature to Steam that enabled users to trade in-game items as a way to make it easier for people to get the items they wanted in games featuring in-game economies.

Since then a number of gambling sites started leveraging the Steam trading system, and there’s been some false assumptions about our involvement with these sites. We’d like to clarify that we have no business relationships with any of these sites. We have never received any revenue from them. And Steam does not have a system for turning in-game items into real world currency.

These sites have basically pieced together their operations in two-part fashion. First, they are using the OpenID API as a way for users to prove ownership of their Steam accounts and items. Any other information they obtain about a user’s Steam account is either manually disclosed by the user or obtained from the user’s Steam Community profile (when the user has chosen to make their profile public). Second, they create automated Steam accounts that make the same web calls as individual Steam users.

Using the OpenID API and making the same web calls as Steam users to run a gambling business is not allowed by our API nor our user agreements. We are going to start sending notices to these sites requesting they cease operations through Steam, and further pursue the matter as necessary. Users should probably consider this information as they manage their in-game item inventory and trade activity.

This is definitely a response to the CSGO controversy with TmarTn and Prosyndicate. They were recently discovered to be involved with a gambling site called CSGO Lotto. As the owners of that site, they failed to disclose that fact until YouTuber HonorTheCall posted a video detailing the information that indicated that. The end result of it was the duo being added to a class-action lawsuit being brought against Valve, with a formal investigation now ongoing.  We’ll update this post if more information is discovered.

Share this post:

FacebookTwitterLinkedInPinterest

Recent Videos

10 Recent Games We REGRET We DIDN'T COVER

10 Recent Games We REGRET We DIDN'T COVER

Crimson Desert: 10 MISTAKES YOU SHOULDN'T MAKE

Crimson Desert: 10 MISTAKES YOU SHOULDN'T MAKE

Crimson Desert (console) - Before You Buy

Crimson Desert (console) - Before You Buy

BETHESDA REGRETS ELDER SCROLLS 6, 10 NEW GAMES ANNOUNCED & MORE

BETHESDA REGRETS ELDER SCROLLS 6, 10 NEW GAMES ANNOUNCED & MORE

Crimson Desert: 10 Things The Game DOESN'T TELL YOU

Crimson Desert: 10 Things The Game DOESN'T TELL YOU

Crimson Desert - Before You Buy

Crimson Desert - Before You Buy

What The HELL Is Going On With Nvidia DLSS 5?

What The HELL Is Going On With Nvidia DLSS 5?

20 Upcoming Games That CROSS THE LINE OF INSANITY

20 Upcoming Games That CROSS THE LINE OF INSANITY

10 Video Game Graphics That STILL Hold Up

10 Video Game Graphics That STILL Hold Up

Category: UpdatesTag: Steam, Valve

Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • Xbox Partner Preview Event Scheduled For March 26
  • Rumor: Nintendo Cutting Production Of Switch 2 Consoles This Quarter By 30 %
  • Rumor: 3rd Party Studio Abstraction Games Built Halo: Campaign Evolved’s Missions
  • Minecraft Dungeons II Releasing 2026 On Xbox, PC, PS5, Switch, and Switch 2
  • Another Fake GTA 6 Leak Was Debunked Immediately

Copyright © 2026 · Gameranx · All Rights Reserved · Powered by Mai Theme