fkn0wned.com · Counter-Strike Source > VAC Proof Releases > VAC Detected / Not Working
[VAC2DETECTED] CoconuT 2.7.1 thread (page 5)
The tail end of a CS:S cheat's life cycle — thanked, flagged, then buried as VAC detected.
This is the final page of a long-running thread about the CoconuT 2.7.1 cheat for Counter-Strike: Source, posted in the 'VAC Detected / Not Working' subforum — meaning by this point the release had already been outed as unsafe to use. The last handful of posts are mostly low-effort thank-yous and one-liners from newer members ('Noob' rank), with the thread winding down rather than any real drama. It's a small, quiet snapshot of the site's cheat-sharing culture and how threads got archived once a tool was burned by Valve Anti-Cheat.
Thanks for the hack— DarkSypher
yeah thanks man— NeJoX
lolz— ac1dassasin
[VAC2 DETECTED] CoconuT 2.7
A once-beloved CS:S wallhack rides a wave of 'unhide ty' spam straight into VAC's ban list.
This was a release thread in Fkn0wned's Counter-Strike: Source cheat database for 'CoconuT 2.7,' a multi-feature cheat (radar, wallhack-style ESP, sv_cheats bypass, no-flash/smoke) posted by user PaRaNoID in September 2007. The thread quickly filled with dozens of low-effort 'unhide'/'ty' replies typical of hidden-content cheat forums, plus a few users asking whether it was still working. By mid-November 2007 PaRaNoID closed the topic marking it as VAC2 detected, moving it into the 'VAC Detected / Not Working' archive section — a routine but telling snapshot of the constant hack/detection cycle that defined this scene.
no banadit anymore, back to coconut...— rnie
I like coconuts.... This is my 3rd coconut hack an...— Lauri
this still vac proof?— AK178
[VAC2DETECTED] Hack-Vision CSS Public v1.2
14 pages deep in the CSS hack graveyard — the thread that outlived its own cheat.
This is the tail end of a sprawling 14-page thread in the 'VAC Detected / Not Working' subforum, marking the point where the once-hyped Hack-Vision CSS Public v1.2 cheat had been flagged as VAC-detected and effectively retired. By this point the thread had devolved into a long tail of low-effort bumps and one-word replies from mostly low-post-count 'Noob' members, the usual afterlife of a burned public release. It's a snapshot of the forum's cheat-release ecosystem in early 2008 — the churn of tools getting banned, threads getting archived, and members drifting through with minimal engagement.
ok nice one lad— YouRBaDBoY
woot woot— Stinkyarmpit