Another major drama has exploded in Polish Counter-Strike: social media is rapidly spreading screenshots, voice messages, and chat excerpts that allegedly connect AntyVirus, people around him, and Oramond matches to betting, suspicious arrangements, and technical manipulation. While one side is calling it “the tip of the iceberg,” the other is trying to push the story toward a full investigation. At the same time, it is important to establish the main point right away: the publicly available materials look serious, but their full authenticity and context have not yet been confirmed by an independent investigation.
A chaotic leak without an ending?
The story is gaining momentum from several directions at once. On one side, there are emotional statements from people well known on the Polish scene; on the other, there is a stack of chat screenshots mentioning bets, map scores, DMA “logistics,” requests not to communicate with a player directly, and even address details. Against that backdrop, the community is trying to understand whether this is yet another chaotic leak with no ending, or a case that could already reach tournament operators or ESIC.
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How it all started
The trigger for the new wave was a post from Paweł “innocent” Mocek, who wrote that he had listened to a voice message from Telegram and “confirms 100%” that it concerned AntyViruscsgo. In the same thread, he stated that “this degenerate only took about 130 VRS points from us, potential tournament wins, contract opportunities, and money from tournaments we should have won.”
In other words, the tone of the discussion from the very start was not “there are strange questions, let’s look into it,” but as harsh and accusatory as possible. That is exactly what very quickly pushed the story from local Polish Twitter into the broader scene.
What exact package of “evidence” is circulating online
According to the screenshots provided, several types of material were dumped into the public space at once.
The first block consists of chats where bets on matches and series scenarios are allegedly being discussed. One of the screenshots includes phrases such as:
we can do 2:1 in bo3 score,
we can bet on maps that you are sure with,
Map 2 you ain’t so sure, we skip,
If you lose it, you call if we should bet decider.
Without context, this looks like a discussion of a betting strategy around specific maps and outcomes.
The second block contains screenshots mentioning DMA and “logistics” from China. In one excerpt, it is said that a “package from China” has already been received, then that it will be configured through an IT specialist, and one reply directly says:
He’s forbidden to communicate with player about matches etc, we got pretty strict system, so he’s communicating about it through me.
This part became one of the most resonant because it combines two highly sensitive topics at once: possible technical means of bypassing rules and hidden communication regarding matches.
The third block consists of forwarded Telegram messages and voice notes, which several people in the thread describe as direct voice messages from AntyVirus or people around him. Judging by innocent’s words, these were exactly the materials he relied on when he wrote that he had “listened to the voice message” and reached an unambiguous conclusion for himself.
Where Oramond comes into this
Oramond are also being tied into the story separately. In another public post, Emil “VigoV93” Khakimov wrote that “Alpha’s captain conducted an investigation into Oramond’s performance” and that the materials were allegedly being translated and sent to the tournament operator. At the same time, the screenshots mention “helping other team with ‘winning’ EPL div2 games,” which only added more suspicion around lower-tier matches.
And this is already an important point not only for the Polish scene. Oramond did indeed play CCT Europe Series 2, and on HLTV you can see their recent matches, including games against Leo and ALGO. The HLTV match pages also show that AntyVirus played for Oramond in those matches.
What exactly the accusing side is trying to prove
If you put everything together, the logic of the people pushing this story is roughly this: they believe there was a network of contacts in which match results or specific maps were discussed, possible bets on them were discussed, and technical means were also discussed that could be connected to cheating or bypassing rules.
On top of that come the emotional formulations from innocent. In one post, he literally writes that they “got 3rd–4th yesterday and won $3000 instead of 1st–2nd and $7500/$12500,” and earlier did not even make it to LAN because they lost a promotion match against them. So for him, this is not an abstract story about morality or fairness, but a very concrete grievance about lost results, money, and opportunities to develop the team.
But this wave also has a weak point
Despite how loud it is, the whole story has one major problem: from the screenshots provided, it is impossible to independently and conclusively confirm the full context, the timing, the real identities of all participants, and the links between the separate episodes.
Some of the images look very serious, but without full verification they still remain leaks, not a finished investigation. For example, a screenshot with the Discord profile “AntyVirus” or fragments of chats on their own still do not prove match-fixing or the use of prohibited devices. They only create grounds for suspicion and for further checking.
That is exactly why it is very important here not to make final conclusions in place of tournament operators, anti-cheat services, or disciplinary bodies.
Why this story hit the scene so hard
First, because this is not some no-name screenshot from an anonymous channel, but posts from people who have long been known on the scene. Paweł “innocent” Mocek is a former Polish pro player with a long career.
Second, the set of topics itself is too toxic even separately: bets, chats about maps, DMA, alleged communication intermediaries, addresses, money splits, accusations of stolen chances at VRS points and tournament results.
Third, the community has long reacted painfully to any hints of match-fixing in tier-2 and tier-3. Historically, stories like this have ended very harshly for the scene if the accusations reached the point of proof.
What we have right now
At this moment, it is more accurate to speak not of a proven scandal, but of a serious wave of accusations backed by a large number of screenshots and statements from public figures. All of this looks loud enough that the topic is unlikely to disappear in a day.
But it is equally honest to say something else: right now, the public space contains more emotion, fragments, and suspicions than finally confirmed conclusions. And until there is a full review of the sources, a timeline, technical verification, and a reaction from the competent structures, it is simply too early to treat either side as unquestionably right.
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A loud story from the Polish scene
The Polish scene has once again found itself at the center of a very dirty and very loud story. Screenshots, voice messages, and public statements paint a picture that looks maximally alarming: possible betting on one’s own matches, conversations about maps and scores, mentions of DMA, and intermediaries in communication.
But for now, this is precisely a public explosion of accusations, not a final verdict. So the main conclusion here is simple: the drama is already huge, the reputational damage has already happened, but the final conclusions about the guilt or innocence of the sides should be made not by tweets and not by screenshots torn out of context, but by a full investigation.

