: Tournament admins noticed suspicious activity on his PC during a match against Vietnam’s Revolution. When they approached him to inspect his computer, Kumawat attempted to manually delete the file while the admin was watching.
: To bypass tournament security, Kumawat renamed his cheat software to "word.exe" to make it look like a standard Microsoft Word file. CSHacked.exe
Watch the breakdown of how the 'Word.exe' scandal unfolded on the main stage: : Tournament admins noticed suspicious activity on his
: The "word.exe" hack was discovered, leading to the immediate disqualification of Optic India and a five-year ban for Kumawat from all ESIC-member events. This story became a legendary cautionary tale in esports about the risks and ultimate futility of using renamed executables to hide malicious software. Watch the breakdown of how the 'Word
The most "useful" story involving a similar concept is the of 2018. During the eXTREMESLAND Asia Finals, professional player Nikhil "forsaken" Kumawat was caught using a hack hidden on his computer.
While there is no single real-world file officially named "CSHacked.exe," the name is a common trope in gaming communities, specifically referencing a famous cheating scandal in involving a file disguised as a mundane application. The Story of "Word.exe": The Most Embarrassing CS Scandal
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