The Negev Meta
On March 24, 2017, the CS:GO team made the decision to take the Negev and R8 Revolver out of competitive to make some changes while leaving the weapons available in casual, demolition, or deathmatch gamemodes. On April 12, 2017, they made the weapons available in competitive again, but with some changes. They reduced the firing delay on the R8 and lowered it’s accuracy over a long distance while reducing its cost to make it a viable 1st round buy. The Negev, however, had the most drastic change, reducing its cost to $2000 and making its shots settle to near-perfect accuracy after just 40 of its 200 round clip. This allows the weapon to be an extremely powerful 2nd round buy instead of a scarce late-game buy. The CS:GO team’s excuse for this low price is that they “expect that the Negev will be a situational weapon that will require experimentation on the part of teams to be effective, so as a starting point its price has been lowered significantly”. Let me tell you why that has destroyed competitive matchmaking for the next two weeks.
There is an unspoken no autos rule where both teams silently agree not to purchase the auto snipers, Negev, M249, and XM1014. When this truce is broken, you can hear a phrase uttered into the ear of the one who broke it: “break the auto ice, pay the auto price”. This silent rule is generally in play because for the most part, people agree that these auto weapons are overpowered and difficult to counter. This Negev change has completely destroyed this unspoken rule, making it the dominant weapon in a lot of matches simply because it is more overpowered than ever. I can see why the CS:GO team decided to make the price of this weapon so low, to learn about how the changes they made to the weapon itself affects the competitive environment. But at $2000 and a spread that becomes more accurate over time, it makes this weapon a better choice than an AK-47 or an M4 rifle, both economically and strategically. This means that more players in matchmaking chosen to use this weapon over those which are usually chosen. This completely destroys the competitive meta until the price of the weapon, or some of its stats, are changed.
Already most eSports organizations have banned this weapon for use in competitive play because it is currently too overpowered. You can try and make the argument that “maybe the competition meta needs a change”, but you would be wrong. CS:GO prides itself on being a balanced game in terms of equal weapon power, each weapon with its own advantages and disadvantages to others in certain situations. CS:GO is a very balanced game in my opinion, however this new Negev has made the game unbalanced and certainly broken. I believe that the CS:GO team is aware of this fact and will change the weapon as soon as they have enough data to justify changes, but I am among the portion of the community who have sworn off competitive gameplay until it is fixed. I mean, I love CS:GO, but honestly this is very wrong Valve. Please fix this broken Negev meta.











