Monarch, founder of the Counter-Strike skin betting website CSGOEmpire, openly talked about getting people to stage crash at the CS2 Major Copenhagen during the quarterfinal match between G2 and MOUZ. During the disruptions at the Royal Arena in Copenhagen, Monarch was live on Kick talking about how his people were being detained by the security.
In a post made on X after a couple of protestors managed to storm the stage and disrupt the competition, the founder of CSGOEmpire claimed that his Kick stream was taken down. He also revealed that some of "our men" had been handcuffed by the authorities following the demonstration, but declared that he had achieved his goals. The social media post reads:
He had also tagged a blog post on the CSGOEmpire website titled "The Wars We Wage" which explains the reasons for the protest.
Clips from Monarch's Kick stream before the debacle at the CS2 Major Copenhagen are going viral on social media. It appears that the founder/owner of the skin-betting website had orchestrated the disruption for some time, and it was supposed to be a protest against G2's partnership with CSGORoll, a rival website for the recent HypeDrop "exit scam."
In a blog post on CSGOEmpire, the group claimed that HypeDrop, which is affiliated with CSGORoll, scammed users out of their money by abruptly shutting down all operations a few days ago.
Monarch had been streaming on Kick while the CS2 Major quarterfinals were underway. Before the disruptions had started at the arena, he encouraged spectators in the audience to rush the stage, stating his people would be willing to give them handcuffs and superglue to disrupt the event.
Here is a long video from the Kick stream titled G2 PARTNERED WITH ILLEGAL SCAM CASINO| PROTEST
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