Remember Counter-Strike: Source? The shinier, smoother sibling of Counter-Strike 1.6 that either defined your high school LAN era or got overshadowed by Counter-Strike: Global Offensive? Well, the classic multiplayer shooter just made a very unexpected comeback over the weekend.
Counter-Strike: Source surged to 56,238 concurrent players on Sunday morning (ET), per SteamDB —more than doubling its recent daily averages of around 17,500 and marking its highest count since May 2012.
And the reason? Good ol’ Garry’s Mod.
Garry’s Mod, the beloved chaos sandbox that birthed everything from Trouble in Terrorist Town to meme machinima, just rolled out a stealthy update that added deeper support for Counter-Strike: Source assets. That tiny tweak triggered a wave of downloads, mods, and map rebuilds from creators and nostalgia junkies alike. Suddenly, people are booting up Source again—not ironically, but full send.
If you didn’t know, Counter-Strike: Source has always been the skeleton key behind many Garry’s Mod maps and props. But as GMod aged and players leaned into Source 2 or newer Counter-Strike entries, its role faded into legacy territory. Now? It’s like discovering your dusty Steam library has one last LAN party in it.
What’s really happening here?
- Mod culture revival: One small update reminded everyone how vital Counter-Strike: Source still is to Garry’s Mod’s ecosystem.
- Nostalgia fuel: Aging millennials and modders are revisiting the game that defined early 2000s PC FPS style.
- Community magic: This wasn’t a marketing push—just organic resurgence through sandbox creativity.
Whether this spike fizzles out or keeps building, one thing is clear: you can’t kill a classic. Especially not one backed by Valve and meme-fueled physics.
If Counter-Strike: Source ends up surpassing Counter-Strike 2 on Steam’s most-played first-person shooters list next week, we’re not saying we called it.