AntyVirus quits CS after match-fixing and DMA allegations

AntyVirus quits CS after match-fixing and DMA allegations - news.white.market

Miłosz ‘AntyVirus’ Konieczka announced he will leave Counter-Strike after being accused of match-fixing and using DMA cheat hardware; he denies the claims and CCT opened a probe.

Miłosz “AntyVirus” Konieczka announced he will leave Counter-Strike after accusations of match-fixing and the use of Direct Memory Access (DMA) cheat hardware. He denied the claims in a final post on X and offered to cooperate with the Esports Integrity Commission (ESIC). Tournament organiser CCT confirmed it has opened a probe into his former Oramond roster, which now competes as DragonClaw.

In his post, AntyVirus wrote he was “done and tired of stuff going on” and that there was “no point to fight with anybody here.” He said five years of effort to become a professional were met by repeated accusations of cheating. He listed steps he took to prove his integrity, including recording point-of-view footage with OBS, using cameras with full visibility (sometimes two cameras), and running kernel-level anti-cheat and secure boot measures. “I was always trying my best to beat allegations,” he added.

The allegations surfaced after CYBERSHOKE captain Daniil “alpha” Demin posted material he presented as evidence linking AntyVirus and other former Oramond players to match-fixing and to shipments of DMA hardware. The organisation’s operations manager shared the material prior to Demin’s post. CCT confirmed the probe covers the former Oramond lineup now playing under the DragonClaw name.

Demin’s post included claims that AntyVirus provided an address, allegedly his and an aunt’s, to receive DMA devices. He presented voice chat excerpts he described as capturing AntyVirus asking how to use DMA tools and named several players whom he identified as having verified the samples, including Paweł “innocent” Mocek and Martin “zur1s” Sláma.

AntyVirus disputed the evidence, saying the address could be explained by long-standing tournament wins that awarded PC equipment. He also questioned the audio, arguing it could be fabricated with artificial intelligence or recreated by asking someone to repeat a line with a weak accent: “it’s not hard to ask somebody from Poland with poor accent and tell him to ‘say this phrase.'”

Demin wrote that the original source, described as “Person X”, told him the plan was for AntyVirus to accept full blame and urged authorities to widen the inquiry to other team members. CCT’s investigation will assess the scope and credibility of the submitted material. Several members of the group were previously the subject of a 2025 integrity statement from another organisation ahead of a match against M1.

Direct Memory Access devices are external tools that can access a computer’s memory to run or inject cheats and can be difficult for standard anti-cheat software to detect. ESIC and tournament controllers will review the evidence and determine whether rules were breached and what sanctions, if any, should follow.

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