He didn't turn on wallhacks. That was primitive.
For three months, the competitive Counter-Strike 2 ladder had been poisoned. Not by the usual rage-hackers—the spinbots and bunnies who were banned within hours. No, this was different. This was a surgical, almost artistic, destruction of the game’s integrity.
Twelve thousand players around the world, paying $80 a month in crypto, were all using his ghost. They were climbing to Global Elite, signing with tier-3 esports orgs, and being celebrated as "prodigies."
NinjaCS functions as a bridge between a cheat's raw code (usually a .dll file) and the active CS2 game client.