Valve adds loadouts to CS2, allowing players to pick both M4s in a match

A huge change for players.

An enemy taken down on Dust2 in Counter-Strike 2.
Screengrab by Dot Esports via Valve

Valve released a major Counter-Strike 2 update on June 6, introducing several new changes to the Counter-Strike franchise, including loadouts.

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In the upcoming release, players will be able to choose up to 15 different weapons in their loadout—five pistols, five mid-tier weapons, and any five rifles. These 15 weapons of choice will be taken into the future matches they load into, though the loadout can be changed at any time between games. Additionally, the counter-terrorists will be able to pick both the M4A4 and M4A1-S, which will drastically change the way teams play the game.

Three categories include different weapons, naturally. Pistols, as the name suggests, will allow players to pick handguns only. Rifles include the M4A4, FAMAS, M4A1-S, SSG 08, AUG, AWP, and SCAR-20 for the CT side. The terrorists will be able to create their selection by choosing from all shared mentioned weapons and the Galil, AK-47, G3SG1, and SG 553. All other weapons will make the third “mid-tier” category, which was divided into “SMGs” and “Heavy” in CS:GO.

This change will allow players to create their own loadout which will suit their playstyle the most. This will naturally also let them experiment and have different sets for each map and each position they play, which ought to have an enormous influence on both average players and pros.

Related: CS:GO pro admits to committing fraud against his own teammates

On top of that, Valve added even more changes in CS2 June 6’s update, including a buyback option, and replacing Dust2 in the beta playtest with another classic map, Mirage. The devs still, however, haven’t revealed the release date of the game, which is set to launch this Summer as a free CS:GO update.

Author
Image of Mateusz Miter
Mateusz Miter
Freelance Writer at Dot Esports. Mateusz previously worked for numerous outlets and gaming-adjacent companies, including ESL. League of Legends or CS:GO? He loves them both. In fact, he wonders which game he loves more every day. He wanted to go pro years ago, but somewhere along the way decided journalism was the more sensible option—and he was right.