Description:
Counter-Strike is a first-individual shooter in which players join either the terrorist group, the counter-terrorist group, or have to be onlookers. Every group endeavors to finish their main goal objective and/or wipe out the restricting group. Each round begins with the two groups bringing forth at the same time.

A player can be played by one of eight diverse default character models (four for every side, albeit Counter-Strike: Condition Zero included two additional models, conveying the aggregate to ten). Players are for the most part given a few moments before the round starts (known as "stop time") to plan and purchase gear, amid which they can't assault or move (one remarkable special case is that a player might get harm amid stop time. This happens when a guide is modified to bring forth players at a specific tallness over the ground, subsequently creating fall harm to the player. This is a strategy map architect use to modify the beginning "HP" of players on a guide). They can come back to the purchase zone inside of a set measure of time to purchase more gear (some custom maps included impartial "purchase zones" that could be used by both groups). Once the round has finished, surviving players hold their hardware for use in the following round; players who were executed start the following round with the fundamental default beginning to gear.

Standard money related rewards are honored for winning a round, losing a round, murdering an adversary, being the first to teach a prisoner to take after, protecting a prisoner or planting (terrorist)/defusing (counter terrorist) the bomb.

The scoreboard shows group scores notwithstanding insights for every player: name, kills, passings, and ping (in milliseconds). The scoreboard additionally shows whether a player is dead, conveying the bomb (on bomb maps), or is the VIP (on death maps), in spite of the fact that data on players on the contradicting group is avoided a player until his/her demise, as this data can be imperative.

Slaughtered players get to be "observers" for the length of time of the round; they can't change their names before their next produce, content visit can't be sent to or got from live players; and voice talk must be gotten from live players and not sent to them (unless the car souvenir is set to 1). Observers are by and large ready to watch whatever is left of the round from numerous selectable perspectives, albeit a few servers cripple some of these perspectives to keep dead players from handing-off data about living players to their partners through option media (most remarkably voice on account of Internet bistros and Voice over IPprograms, for example, TeamSpeak or Ventrilo). This type of dumping is known as "ghosting."

Requirements:
Minimum: 500 mhz processor, 96mb ram, 16mb video , Windows 2000/XP/ME/SE, Mouse, Keyboard
Recommended: 800 mhz processor, 128mb ram, 32mb video, Windows 2000/XP/7/8, Mouse, Keyboard



Setup 300 MB

Maps.exe  180 MB

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