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fkn0wned.com · Counter-Strike Source > VAC Proof Releases

Detected Hacks Report (CS:S VAC Proof Releases, page 7)

The community-run VAC 'body count' list — page after page of once-untouchable cheats getting crossed off as banned.

This is the tail end of a long-running community-maintained tracking thread in the CS:Source VAC Proof Releases subforum, where members logged which cheats had been flagged as 'Detected' by Valve Anti-Cheat versus still 'Unknown.' By late 2007/early 2008 the mood had shifted from bragging to caution, with several posters reporting they'd gotten VAC banned testing various releases and warning others off specific hacks like JAvHAX, HackVision, and Fkn0wned's own Simplicity tool. The thread doubles as an informal casualty report and a running obituary for the site's own in-house 'FkN' cheat releases as Valve's detection caught up with them.

I used different account for each hack to test if they were detectable or not. In the end, all the accounts I used to hack are VAC Banned. Hope you guys enjoy banned too— blink_friend
yeah...time to update the vac2 proof page— maer
Fkn0wned Simplicity got me banned— Firefighter
Insatiable.CratycloSblink_friendMzoulk3NzOTimeleft
counter-strike-sourcevac-banscheat-detectionfkn0wned-releasescheat-scene-history

THiSGaMeSuX & FkN0wNeD Public CSS v1

A ten-page public CSS cheat thread full of thank-yous, 'unhide' pleas, and one guy's keyboard possessed for two days straight

This long-running thread in the Counter-Strike: Source 'VAC Proof Releases' section centered on a publicly released cheat named 'THiSGaMeSuX & FkN0wNeD Public CSS v1'. Most of the visible activity is the classic tail end of a cheat-release thread: dozens of low-post-count members dropping quick 'thanks', 'nice', or 'unhide' replies (the last presumably to reveal a hidden download link), a couple of skeptical or bricked-PC reports, and general low-effort bumping across pages 6 through 10. It captures the everyday texture of the board's VAC Proof Releases forum — high traffic, low substance, lots of throwaway accounts, and a persistent undercurrent of doubt about whether the cheat would actually get people banned.

Tried this out and deleted it and now its repeating the key sequence I used to move/shoot/chat in game for about 30 minutes...its been doing it for 2 days. Norton doesnt find anything so now I get to reformat.— Wtf is a Pwn
i have a feeling vac can detect this.. but ill give it a go.. ill report if i get banned ^^— nick2412
fu!— Assaw
deathaimWtf is a Pwnklaus12Jacklyns_enigmajumpingbeannick2412
csscounter-strike-sourcevac-proof-releasespublic-cheatcheat-threadvac-ban-risk

JaVhaX 1.3 release thread (tail end)

30 pages deep into a CS:S cheat release, and the replies had shrunk to one-word verdicts — 'kl', 'looks cool', 'DETECTED! DO NOT USE!'

This is the final page of a long-running (30-page) release thread for a Counter-Strike: Source cheat called JaVhaX 1.3, posted in the forum's 'VAC Proof Releases' section. By this point the thread had devolved into low-effort bumps from mostly brand-new, low-post-count members — thanks, requests for help getting it to run, and at least one blunt warning that the tool had been detected by VAC and shouldn't be used. It's a snapshot of the tail-end lifecycle of a cheat release: initial hype long gone, now just stragglers finding the thread late and one user flagging it as burned.

DETECTED! DO NOT USE!— howeasy
Umm I can't get this to work. I run it and it comes up but when I start CS:S Nothing is there.— superdood
looks cool— heski
bonehead8011superdoodantid2howeasyheskiubercowman
counter-strike-sourcevac-proof-releasescheat-releasejavhaxdetected2008

Chronic Hook v1 Release Thread

A Christmas Eve cheat drop from belink & Reneg4d3 that kept CS:S regulars glued for three pages of thanks and bug reports.

This thread in the VAC Proof Releases / Releases section of the Counter-Strike: Source board announced 'Chronic Hook v1', a hack described as five months in development and undetected as of Christmas Eve, credited to belink, Reneg4d3, and LiX. The original post framed it as a holiday gift to the community ('Merry Xmas! -blnk'). The rest of the visible thread is mostly short reply-and-thank-you posts from newer, low-post-count members trying it out, typical of a release thread cycling through page after page of 'thanks', 'testing', and one-word bumps.

Well, here we are. Finally releasing me and Reneg4d3s 5-month-in-development hack.— laptops (quoting blnk)
Merry Xmas! -blnk— laptops (quoting blnk)
hmm lets see if it works shall we— slava1993
laptopsbelinkReneg4d3LiXchaosblackslava1993
counter-strike-sourcecheat-releasevac-proofchronic-hook2007-eracheat-scene

Full_Flashlight - VAC Proof Releases (Counter-Strike: Source)

Pages and pages of 'unhide' just to see a flashlight cheat nobody remembers using.

This was a long-running release thread in the CS:S 'VAC Proof Releases' subforum for a cheat called Full_Flashlight, originally posted by user afteryou back in May 2007. By early 2008 the thread had ballooned to several pages, almost entirely filled with low-effort 'unhide' replies from members trying to reveal the hidden download links, plus the occasional one-word reaction ('lol', 'ty', 'nice', 'sexy!'). A minor bit of drama flares up when a late 2007 gravedig draws an angry moderator-style reply from -Still Life-, a banned member with the title 'MS Hacking God', yelling at people for reviving old threads.

DONT FUCKING GRAVEDIG.— -Still Life-
this could be fin when ur camping lol— scuddzilla
That's awesome. Unhide.— G3lmis
afteryou-Still Life-thesourcescuddzillaG3lmisjobe51095
counter-strike-sourcevac-proofcheat-releaseunhide-culturegravedig-dramaearly-2000s-forum

CoconuT-2.7.3-CE release thread

The coconut hack that ran for 14 pages of 'thnx' and 'unhide plz'

A release-board post by member PaRaNoID shared 'CoconuT-2.7.3-CE', a Counter-Strike: Source consistency/radar-hack tool billed as VAC2-proof as of late November 2007, complete with a full antivirus scan rundown. The thread ballooned to at least 14 pages, mostly one-line replies from Noob-ranked members thanking the poster and asking to 'unhide' the download link — a classic fkn0wned release-thread pattern. Little actual discussion beyond gratitude and one member (Devlin1991) asking whether it was basically a glorified wallhack via radar. Banned user 'jacal' (tagged 'Pro Spammer') also appears in the thread list, hinting at the forum's looser moderation of spam accounts.

sweet blud sweeeeeeeeeet— louisbrown6934
is this just for using the radar like a wall hack ?? to see where they are on teh map etc— Devlin1991
I love the coconuts =]— yoyopompom
PaRaNoIDDevlin1991jacalZarbonPRORollDeep1989
cssvac-proof-releasescheat-releasecoconut-hackconsistency-bypass2007

Epic Lite Public v1 — VAC Proof Releases

31 pages of 'unhide plz', 'ty', and one truly unhinged grandma insult — the megathread that never died.

This was a long-running release thread in the Counter-Strike: Source 'VAC Proof Releases' subforum for a cheat called 'Epic Lite Public v1'. Like most threads of its kind, the actual content sat behind hidden/spoiler tags, so page after page filled up with members posting 'unhide', 'thanks', or 'ty' just to reveal the download — a ritual that stretched the topic out to 31 pages over months. The vibe is classic low-effort bump culture: mostly one-line noob posts, a few Xfire handles dropped for street cred, and at least one bizarre flame-war insult copy-pasted verbatim by two different users. Nothing dramatic happened here beyond the grind of the unhide economy, but it's a perfect time capsule of how these cheat-release threads actually functioned day to day.

you god damn son of an ugly piece of fucking shit.you ulow bastard just go to hell and get a blowjob from your grandma.— fknowner1337
this detected?— Nyiddle
Let's try... Thnx— FuelStream
darkmagi1509ynaggofknowner1337Muhsuxreload93jj
counter-strike-sourcevac-proof-releasescheat-threadunhide-culturefkn0wned

AdderHacks Public v1 release thread

A CS:S cheat menu drop that snowballed into a 25-page 'unhide' pile-on lasting over a month

In the VAC Proof Releases section of Fkn0wned's Counter-Strike: Source board, veteran member 'ballistic' dropped a public release of 'AdderHacks,' an insert-key menu cheat, complete with screenshots, an MD5 checksum, and a full antivirus scan table to prove it was clean at the time. The thread exploded into the classic forum-cheat-release ritual: dozens of members replying with little more than 'unhide,' 'ty,' or 'nice' just to reveal the hidden download links, with a scattering of genuine reactions ranging from excitement to later reports that the tool had gotten people flagged. It ran from late November 2007 into January 2008, ballooning to 25 pages, and stands as a fairly ordinary but representative snapshot of the site's cheat-scene culture.

these pretty much suck ass... They have gotten me...— dismal
may a poor Russian see?— Russiansoldier
i just wanted to no why are all the hacks ...— boxhedmuzz
ballisticjcomp6dismal
csscheat-releasevac-proofunhide-culture2007-2008counter-strike-source

BaDaZZ VoiceAnnoy SpamPack thread (page 12)

Twelve pages deep, and people are STILL begging for the unhide link.

This is the tail end of a long-running release thread in the Counter-Strike: Source 'VAC Proof Releases' subforum for a tool called BaDaZZ VoiceAnnoy SpamPack, an audio-based annoyance/spam tool for the game. By page 12 the thread has devolved into the classic forum-death-spiral pattern: a trickle of low-post-count members dropping in just to say 'unhide' or give a one-line reaction, with almost no substantive discussion left. It captures the everyday churn of a mid-2000s cheat/tool release board rather than any major drama.

this is a nice annoying voice..— hackers111
unhide plz and ty <33— phantasy
MarcusLOLZhackers111phantasySBZjuicy
counter-strike-sourcevac-proof-releasesvoice-annoyspam-toolforum-nostalgia

Red Dot — Gametration's Long-Running CS:S Cheat Thread

A 2007 cheat release that somehow limped on for 15 pages and a full year of 'unhide plz' begging.

This is the tail end of a long-running release thread on Gametration.com's Counter-Strike: Source 'VAC Proof Releases' subforum, originally posted by LoRd Ragealot in May 2007 for a cheat called 'Red Dot.' By the time this page was archived (early 2008), the thread had stretched to 15 pages, mostly filled with low-effort bumps from members asking to unhide the download links or offering one-line feedback. It's a snapshot of the classic download-gated cheat forum grind: post credits/description, hide the links, and watch dozens of noobs beg to see them.

Extremely useful!— Timeleft
unhizzle the redizzle— ProfessorL
does it worrk— Maxwell123
LoRd Ragealot
counter-strike-sourcevac-proofcheat-releasegametrationdownload-gatingforum-nostalgia

Bunnyhop Hack (CS:S VAC Proof Releases) — thread marked detected/closed

A long-running bunnyhop cheat thread finally got the 'detected' stamp and locked down for good.

This was a 17-page release thread in the Counter-Strike: Source 'VAC Proof Releases' section for a bunnyhop tool that let players auto-jump instead of manually timing space-bar presses. By the time this final page was archived, moderator PaRaNoID had already closed the thread back on 15-11-2007 with the note that it had been detected by Valve's anti-cheat. The last few posts are just stragglers replying to an old download link long after the tool was rendered useless, a common fate for these VAC-proof release threads.

Ever wanted to do the bunnyhop without using a hack, and just keep holding space to jump, well here's a tool I found on the net : AS ALWAYS : USE AT YOUR OWN RISK!!— rnie
PaRaNoIDrnieMohamedsaladat820scriptermonezurka
counter-strike-sourcebunnyhopvac-proof-releasesdetectedcheat-threadcs-source-cheats

SSW (Super Simple Wall:Source) v1.1

A wallhack release thread that mostly turned into 'the download link doesn't work' for pages on end.

This was a release thread in the Counter-Strike: Source 'VAC Proof Releases' subforum for a wallhack tool called SSW (Super Simple Wall:Source) v1.1. By the later pages, the thread had devolved into a string of members reporting that the download link was broken or just redirected to the site homepage, rather than continued discussion of the tool itself. It's a snapshot of the everyday churn of a mid-2000s/2010s cheat forum, full of throwaway noob accounts and dead links rather than any real drama.

nice.. but when i click link it takes me to your homepage— Haxor-pro
gettin the same problem as everyone else. cant download it— saxovts
Haxor-prosaxovts
counter-strike-sourcewallhackvac-proof-releasescheat-releasebroken-linksfkn0wned

Fkn0wned Hack Policy

The fine print: Fkn0wned's official 'we're not responsible if VAC bans you' disclaimer for its cheat releases.

A pinned policy post in the VAC Proof Releases section of the Counter-Strike Source forum, laying out how Fkn0wned classified its hack downloads as either VAC2-proof or detected, and disclaiming responsibility for any bans resulting from their use. Posted by staff/moderator KZA in mid-2006, it's a classic liability-covering notice typical of cheat-scene forums of the era rather than a discussion thread. It captures the site's self-aware tagline vibe — 'We Moderate Your Fun!' — while formally washing its hands of consequences.

We do not take any responsibility for VAC2 bans.— KZA
You download hacks at your own risk.— KZA
KZA
cheat-policyvac-bancounter-strike-sourcedisclaimercheat-scene

VAC Detected / Not Working — CS:S Cheat Graveyard

The forum's own boneyard: every CSS cheat that got VAC-banned into oblivion, archived thread by thread.

This was the designated dumping ground on Fkn0wned.com's Counter-Strike: Source section for cheats that had been flagged VAC-detected or had otherwise stopped working. Threads for releases like blackk-public, CoconuT, Hack-Vision, Pur InJcTioN, and dozens of other named hacks got tagged '[VAC2DETECTED]' or '[VAC2PROOF]' as their status changed over time, with community members chiming in on each one's fate. The activity log spans roughly September through late February of a 2007-2008 stretch, showing a steady churn of new cheat releases, quick detections, and constant re-uploading — a snapshot of the era's endless cat-and-mouse game between cheat devs and Valve Anti-Cheat.

PaRaNoIDrnieMalwareShiftyc0keAnthraX
counter-strike-sourcevac-bancheatscheat-releases2007-2008forum-archive