Esports Community Rallies Behind Disabled CS:GO Player After Being Bullied

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Esports Community Rallies Behind Disabled CS:GO Player After Being Bullied

Kevin Hitt Head Writer - Counter Strike: Global Offensive April 18, 2017 CS:GO , Features

His name is Adam Bahriz, but most of you know him as “Loop”. Loop loves to play Counter-Strike: Global Offensive and is quite good, even compared to those that can actually see their computer monitor.

Yes, see as in what you are doing right now reading this.

Loop is legally blind and suffers from a rare genetic condition called HSAN type 2.

HSAN type II is a condition that primarily affects the sensory nerve cells, which transmit information about sensations such as pain, temperature, and touch. Loop cannot feel physical pain.

But he can feel the emotional pain of being ridiculed and bullied. That’s exactly what happened in this instance and it wasn’t the first time.

Loop was kicked from an ESEA match after asking his team in voice chat if they wanted him to smoke off the A Bomb site on Cache while on the Terrorist side. Loop has a slight speech impediment, but is perfectly understandable. The players with whom he was playing called him a troll, said they were going to mute him, and then ultimately kicked him from the game. All because of the way he sounded.

I bid you that this is where the sadness started and ended. You see, when the esports community found out that one of their own was being bullied and discriminated against, they rallied–and did they ever.

The leader of Cloud9’s CS:GO squad, Jordan ‘n0thing’ Gilbert, was the first to denounce what had happened and rallied behind Loop. He went so far as to reach out to the young man and offered to play with him. The offer was accepted and Loop had the time of his life.

If Lo0p has a Twitter can someone link me? I’m trying to game with him. — Jordan Gilbert (C9) (@n0thing) April 17, 2017

Loop was then invited to play with the many professional Counter-Strike players and streamed it live on Twitch.tv. Some of you may not have realized that Loop was telling us his story.

With his face pressed up against the monitor as close as he could get, he moved, played, clicked his mouse with expertise that some of you out there will never be able to do. We saw his emotions when he lost a round, we watched him celebrate when he won a round. But perhaps the most poignant and tear jerking move came when Mohamad ‘mOE’ Assad donated $500 to Loop during his stream–twice.

Loop has become the focal point of thousands of professional players and hundreds of thousands of esports fans. We are learning every day that the culture of esports is an inclusive group, that sometimes fight amongst themselves, but never in a way that Loop was treated. That doesn’t fly here.

Ryan ‘fREAKZOID’ Adadir also took to his stream and summed up beautifully what it means to be one of the many great, kind, and compassionate people in the esports community.

“It shows you, though, that the community has so many good people that will go and support a kid even if he is born a certain way. Its a beautiful thing to see somebody go for it even though he may not be accepted by some.”

Well said Ryan, well said. Because of people like you, Loop had the best day of his life.

Read More: CS:GO Pro Player Fox Posts Picture with New Born Baby

soul_oh on April 18th, 2017 at 15:54 UTC »

he's streaming right now if anyone is interested, he also has a lot of info about himself in his profile! https://www.twitch.tv/lo0p__

castanza128 on April 18th, 2017 at 15:23 UTC »

I read "Escorts" instead of "Esports" for some reason, and thought: Aww. That's cool that a bunch of hookers are making him feel special for a day.....

haterhurter1 on April 18th, 2017 at 14:37 UTC »

that didn't seem so much about bullying as it does that people are just tired of other people intentionally ruining games and there's so much of that online that it's usually safe to assume that's what is happening. this time wasn't one of those instances and it's nice to see other players trying to make up for him feeling left out. i had a friend who i played nhl with who only had the use of one hand who also had a speech impediment. he would play goalie and people would yell at him about not being good. he would try to explain himself but people usually couldn't understand what he was saying. once i told them he was having to do everything with one hand they changed their attitude or left. he was genuinely one of the funnest guys to play with cause you could tell how much fun he had when nobody was giving him crap and he would never blame you or get mad when you lost. don't know what happened to him as one day he just stopped playing and his psn account slowly went from a few days offline to several months.

edit- i was trying to remember what it was he used to always say when he made a save and finally it came to me. he would get so excited and say "not in my house!" cracked me up every time.

Edit 2-Wow, thanks for the gold! I never expected to be gilded(sp?)!

Edit3-thought I should mention the toxic people in online games is why I use the name haterhurter.