How the XSE Pro League 2026 Became CS2's Biggest Disaster
Nobody expected the 2026 XSE Pro League to become the disaster it is right now, and that stings even more given the $1,000,000 prize pool attached to it. What was pitched as a big new stop on the Counter-Strike 2 calendar has instead spiraled into so much dysfunction that the community built an entire compilation thread just to keep up with it all.
Things Went South Before Round 1 Even Finished
The opening day in Guangzhou set the tone for everything that followed. Kickoff got pushed from 07:00 to 08:40 local time because of unresolved technical issues, and it wasn't just a scheduling hiccup. Broadcast audio doubled up, one competition PC died mid-tournament and needed its GPU and RAM swapped four separate times, and finals on Day 1 ran more than seven hours behind schedule.
FaZe Clan, one of the biggest names in the field, dropped straight to 0-2 in the pool stage while dealing with broken headsets that left assistant coach Kevin "eNkay J" Kruse unable to talk to his own players during matches.
A Running List of Everything that Broke
The problems piled up so fast that fans started keeping score. Here are some of the biggest issues reported so far:
- Malware, including keyloggers and remote-access trojans found installed on multiple competition PCs
- A Steam account belonging to BetBoom's Magnojez hijacked right after logging into a tournament rig
- Competition PCs missing CS2 installations entirely, forcing last-minute setup delays
- Third-party software like World of Warcraft and torrent clients found on machines meant for pro play
- A transformer explosion near the venue that killed power during a live match
- A reported fire breaking out during a separate match
- Broadcast audio doubling up and broken team headsets cutting off coach-to-player communication
- Matches running hours behind schedule, with Day 1 finals delayed more than seven hours
- Unpaid volunteer staff, mostly students compensated only with food and transport
- Legacy withdrawing from the event entirely over passport issues with their roster
The Malware Fiasco
BetBoom's Magnojez reported his Steam account got hijacked right after he logged into a tournament PC, and he later posted footage of a keylogger and a trojan agent sitting on the machine. Zorte found malware on his own assigned rig too, flagged specifically as a remote-access backdoor.
Reports on the ground counted seven malicious programs total across tournament hardware, and it reportedly took about a full day to get Magnojez's account back, one carrying multiple high-value knives and gloves. Boombl4 publicly asked Valve for help and warned fans not to respond to any messages sent from the compromised account.
Explosions, Fires, and Unpaid Bills
A match between 9z and SINNERS got suspended for an hour after a transformer exploded near the venue, cutting power to the building entirely.
Separately, a fire reportedly broke out during a Lynn Vision versus BIG match, and another blackout was tied to the venue apparently falling behind on utility payments.
Some competition desks even had to be swapped out mid-event for being unusable, adding one more item to an already long list of complaints.
Organizers Finally Speak Up
Facing a wave of backlash, tournament organizer Xinsai Esports issued a public apology, taking responsibility for the venue management and overall production of the event. The statement acknowledged failures in emergency response and promised refunds for fans who paid for autograph sessions that didn't go as planned.
"As the tournament organizer, the committee bears full responsibility for the overall presentation, on-site management, and audience experience. Multiple rounds of preparation, coordination, and testing were completed before the event, but the issues that emerged on the first day exposed clear deficiencies in our on-site execution and emergency response. We will not deflect or make excuses, and will address all criticism and feedback with concrete improvements.
The committee will treat this incident as a lesson, implement corrections immediately, and update the public on progress in a timely manner — striving to deliver a more stable, professional, and organized event that lives up to expectations. Please refer only to official announcements, and help us maintain a rational and constructive atmosphere for viewing and discussion. Going forward, we will repay your trust with more professional and attentive service. We once again apologize to all affected spectators, and thank everyone who is still willing to give us the opportunity to improve."
Xinsai also pushed back on two rumors circulating online, denying that competition PCs lacked CS2 installations altogether and insisting that all beverages served, including Pepsi products, came through official partner channels. The organizer even hinted at possible legal action against what it called maliciously spread misinformation, a claim that clashes directly with what several players had already documented themselves.
With the event still running until July 12, the list of things that went wrong at XSE Pro League 2026 keeps growing by the day. Let's wait and see.
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Featured Image Credit: Xinsai Esports
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