According to Dexerto’s sources, the Esports Integrity Commission (ESIC) is nearing the end of its investigation into the usage of the coaching bug on the professional scene. According to reports from the media, the Commission discovered 52 coaches who had abused the coaching bug.
The news came a year and a half after ESIC issued 27 bans following the original probe. However, some of the coaches who were reprimanded at the time were later acquitted. Representatives from the ESIC are now debating possible punishments against coaches who will be named in the report. The investigation’s findings are scheduled to be released before the start of PGL Major Antwerp 2022 on May 9.
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According to Dexerto’s sources, the extended delay between the first report’s publishing and the current report’s completion is due to the discovery of additional bug variations. If it was only a year and a half ago that the spectator camera was positioned in one location, evidence today suggests that coaches were free to wander about the map.
Esports journalist “Richard Lewis” has released a non-public list of 27 instructors who allegedly employed the bug but were not disciplined. Martin “STYKO” Styk, a board member of the “Counter-Strike Professional Players Association (CSPPA)”, corroborated his claims.