Journalists Invent An Ingenious Way To Fight Russian Propaganda With Counter-Strike
In short:
Russia has banned all media outlets that might tell the truth about the invasion in Ukraine. Because of this most Russians don’t know what’s really going on and believe the propaganda provided by state media.
A group of journalists from Finland are trying to shed light on the ongoing war in Ukraine by hiring map designers to create a town in Counter-Strike with a hidden room that contains information about the war and its victims.
It is important to spread this message as far and wide as possible so that the world, Russians included, can learn the truth.
Below I will copy the full article about the issue and provide a link if you want to go and read it yourself (languages provided are Finnish, English and Russian)
https://www.hs.fi/ulkomaat/art-2000009555855.html
“Countless Russians are unaware of what is happening in Ukraine. In this room, they are forced to see the truth with their own eyes.
Counter-Strike is one of the most popular video games in the world.
Its basic idea is simple: Players are divided into teams of terrorists and counter terrorists. The counter terrorists must defuse bombs or save hostages, for example, while the terrorists try to prevent this.
Each round lasts two minutes, and then the players switch roles. After a few dozen rounds, the winner is declared.
The game is extremely popular in Russia, especially in St. Petersburg and Moscow. It is played by approximately four million Russians, mostly by young men.
Originally created in the United States, Counter-Strike differs from many Western online services and digital platforms in one respect:
It is not forbidden in Russia. Russians can still play the game.
After the start of the war on Ukraine, Russia has banned its citizens from accessing such online services as Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter, as well as the sites of several Western media, including Helsingin Sanomat. Due to this, a large proportion of Russians are not aware of what is going on in Ukraine, for example.
The Russian state-controlled media are not telling the truth.
This sparked a crazy idea: Could we create a place in Counter-Strike, where the millions of young Russian men playing this first-person shooter game would be forced to face the terrors of the war in Ukraine?
For those not familiar with Counter-Strike, here’s a quick introduction: The game environment is called a map. When starting to play, the player first chooses a map. The most popular map is Dust 2, which features a dusty landscape resembling Morocco.
The game has a few dozen official maps, but anyone can create their own maps using tools that are available free of charge. There are over one hundred thousand player-designed maps.
The most widely known map designers, such as Volcano and FMPONE, who have created a popular map located in the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, are big stars in the gaming realm.
In addition to actual gameplay areas, designers often add peculiar extra elements to their maps: hidden messages, graffiti, or even secret rooms containing messages.
Early this year, Helsingin Sanomat commissioned two well-known map designers to create a Counter-Strike map imitating a Slavic city. A secret room was hidden in the map.
The goal of the secret room was simple: to embed real-life war news inside the game.
Why add journalism to a computer game? Immediately after the start of the war in Ukraine, the Russian State Duma passed several laws aimed at suppressing freedom of speech. These laws forbid the dissemination of “false information” about Russian armed forces or Russia’s operations in Ukraine.
Requiring sanctions against Russia is also forbidden.
Violating these laws can lead to prison sentences of up to 15 years.
At the moment, practically all independent media in Russia have been shut down or they have suspended their operations on their own initiative. Some have fled the country. The consequences of the new laws have been heavily reflected on Russian journalists.
Alexander Nevzorov: TV reporter; reported about Russian troops bombing a maternity hospital in Mariupol. Had to flee under the threat of imprisonment and was declared a foreign agent.
Andrei Soldatov: Investigative reporter; indicted after writing about digital dictatorship in Russia and the Russian security services’ operations.
Nastya Krasilnikova: Maker of the Schoolgirls podcast, an investigative series about sexual abuse imposed on girls on an elite Russian summer camp for years. The series was one of the most popular podcasts in Russia in 2022. Krasilnikova had to flee to Israel.
Dmitry Kolezev: Chief editor of the online magazine Republic; had to flee to Lithuania after visibly opposing the Russian aggression on Ukraine.
Evan Gershkovich: American journalist working for Wall Street Journal; arrested in Russia in March 2023, accused of espionage.
Lilia Gildeeva: TV reporter known especially for talk shows; forced to resign from her job and flee Russia in March 2022.
Ilya Krasilshchik: Former CEO of the online magazine Meduza; indicted for spreading “fake news” about the Russian army. Reported, among other topics, on the massacre in Bucha. Now facing a sentence of 10 years.
Helsingin Sanomat’s reporter Petteri Tuohinen and photographer Kalle Koponen were in Bucha, north of Kyiv, when the cruelties of the Russian army were starting to come to light.
The massacre was not fake news. It all happened.
People had been shot on the street. There was a mass grave of civilians behind a church. At least some of the victims had their hands tied behind their back.
Russian media also covered the events taking place in Bucha, but their perspective differed drastically from that featured in other countries.
The TV channels Zvezda and Izvestia both featured a news item from Bucha on 4 April 2022. Both channels offered lengthy citations from sources representing the Russian Ministry of Defence, repeating the same message:
The Ukrainian army brought the dead bodies to the city and placed them on the streets. The Russians didn’t do any harm in Bucha; instead, they helped the local citizens.
In Russia, independent media have been replaced by a continuous flow of propaganda from state-owned television channels. They portray Russia’s actions in Ukraine as a heroic battle against terrorism.
According to surveys considered to be reliable, more than 50% of Russians support the war in Ukraine.
When free press has been suppressed, President Vladimir Putin’s government can display the war in the way they desire: emphasising its heroic nature and downplaying its victims.
CCounter-Strike is a first-person shooter game, i.e. the player views the game environment through the eyes of their avatar. They can run through doors and hit walls.
They have guns and ammunition. If they’re hit, they die.
The moment of death is decisive for Helsingin Sanomat’s secret room.
When a player’s avatar dies, the game view changes: For a while, the player can go through walls or fly around the map. At this stage, they can also find the secret room hidden underground.
The room is hidden near a monument of eternal flame. Eternal flame monuments are common in Russian and Ukrainian cities. They serve as memorials of WW2, or the Great Patriotic War, as it is called in Russia.
In Helsingin Sanomat’s Counter-Strike map, the flame has a different motive. Ukrainian and Russian villages are quite similar. The purpose is to make Russians see that the terrors of war are happening in places that look very familiar to them.
There is a light above the door. This is a hint that taking a closer look at the object may reveal something.
There are stairs leading to an underground room.
First, the player sees a wall with a headline.
Next to the headline, there is a map showing how many civilian targets in Ukraine have been hit by Russians.
Another wall displays a news item on the Bucha massacre. When the player comes close to the images, they hear a Russian voice-over on their radio telling them what the images are about: Ukrainian civilians murdered by Russian soldiers.
Another news item is about a Ukrainian man called Yuriy Glodan. He went out for groceries, and meanwhile a Russian missile killed his family. Helsingin Sanomat’s reporter Katriina Pajari and photographer Rio Gandara met Glodan in Odessa in May 2022.
The story of the Glodan family has never been told to Russians.
The Russian state media have also remained quiet about the Russians who have died in the war. Precise victim counts are impossible to get, because all parties are downplaying their losses and exaggerating those of the opponent. Therefore, estimates also vary.
The table on the secret Counter-Strike room displays the most reliable figure that Helsingin Sanomat has been able to find: 70,000 Russians dead.
The secret room was released to Counter-Strike players on 2 May 2023. At the moment of publishing this article, it is just starting to gain attention.
The designers of the map say that they are proud of their work. “To be able to be involved in making such a map with a humanitarian purpose connected to the real world.”
They don’t want to disclose their names, because they are worried about Russian players’ reactions. They might be harassed and their work could be hindered due to releasing the map.
Both of them have designed hundreds of Counter-Strike maps but never anything like this.
“Russia’s senseless aggression on Ukraine has killed tens of thousands of civilians, including children. The least we can do is to bring Putin’s war crimes and Russian propaganda to light.”
If you want to support the spreading of Helsingin Sanomat’s map, play it on Counter-Strike, or take a screenshot of the prompt below and share it to players you know.
Do you want to support the freedom of press in Russia? Here’s what you can do:
The HS map is called de_voyna.
Find the map in Counter-Strike under Workshop maps.
Play! Try to get Russian players playing.”
In short:
Russia has banned all media outlets that might tell the truth about the invasion in Ukraine. Because of this most Russians don’t know what’s really going on and believe the propaganda provided by state media.
A group of journalists from Finland are trying to shed light on the ongoing war in Ukraine by hiring map designers to create a town in Counter-Strike with a hidden room that contains information about the war and its victims.
It is important to spread this message as far and wide as possible so that the world, Russians included, can learn the truth.
Below I will copy the full article about the issue and provide a link if you want to go and read it yourself (languages provided are Finnish, English and Russian)
https://www.hs.fi/ulkomaat/art-2000009555855.html
“Countless Russians are unaware of what is happening in Ukraine. In this room, they are forced to see the truth with their own eyes.
Counter-Strike is one of the most popular video games in the world.
Its basic idea is simple: Players are divided into teams of terrorists and counter terrorists. The counter terrorists must defuse bombs or save hostages, for example, while the terrorists try to prevent this.
Each round lasts two minutes, and then the players switch roles. After a few dozen rounds, the winner is declared.
The game is extremely popular in Russia, especially in St. Petersburg and Moscow. It is played by approximately four million Russians, mostly by young men.
Originally created in the United States, Counter-Strike differs from many Western online services and digital platforms in one respect:
It is not forbidden in Russia. Russians can still play the game.
After the start of the war on Ukraine, Russia has banned its citizens from accessing such online services as Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter, as well as the sites of several Western media, including Helsingin Sanomat. Due to this, a large proportion of Russians are not aware of what is going on in Ukraine, for example.
The Russian state-controlled media are not telling the truth.
This sparked a crazy idea: Could we create a place in Counter-Strike, where the millions of young Russian men playing this first-person shooter game would be forced to face the terrors of the war in Ukraine?
For those not familiar with Counter-Strike, here’s a quick introduction: The game environment is called a map. When starting to play, the player first chooses a map. The most popular map is Dust 2, which features a dusty landscape resembling Morocco.
The game has a few dozen official maps, but anyone can create their own maps using tools that are available free of charge. There are over one hundred thousand player-designed maps.
The most widely known map designers, such as Volcano and FMPONE, who have created a popular map located in the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, are big stars in the gaming realm.
In addition to actual gameplay areas, designers often add peculiar extra elements to their maps: hidden messages, graffiti, or even secret rooms containing messages.
Early this year, Helsingin Sanomat commissioned two well-known map designers to create a Counter-Strike map imitating a Slavic city. A secret room was hidden in the map.
The goal of the secret room was simple: to embed real-life war news inside the game.
Why add journalism to a computer game? Immediately after the start of the war in Ukraine, the Russian State Duma passed several laws aimed at suppressing freedom of speech. These laws forbid the dissemination of “false information” about Russian armed forces or Russia’s operations in Ukraine.
Requiring sanctions against Russia is also forbidden.
Violating these laws can lead to prison sentences of up to 15 years.
At the moment, practically all independent media in Russia have been shut down or they have suspended their operations on their own initiative. Some have fled the country. The consequences of the new laws have been heavily reflected on Russian journalists.
Alexander Nevzorov: TV reporter; reported about Russian troops bombing a maternity hospital in Mariupol. Had to flee under the threat of imprisonment and was declared a foreign agent.
Andrei Soldatov: Investigative reporter; indicted after writing about digital dictatorship in Russia and the Russian security services’ operations.
Nastya Krasilnikova: Maker of the Schoolgirls podcast, an investigative series about sexual abuse imposed on girls on an elite Russian summer camp for years. The series was one of the most popular podcasts in Russia in 2022. Krasilnikova had to flee to Israel.
Dmitry Kolezev: Chief editor of the online magazine Republic; had to flee to Lithuania after visibly opposing the Russian aggression on Ukraine.
Evan Gershkovich: American journalist working for Wall Street Journal; arrested in Russia in March 2023, accused of espionage.
Lilia Gildeeva: TV reporter known especially for talk shows; forced to resign from her job and flee Russia in March 2022.
Ilya Krasilshchik: Former CEO of the online magazine Meduza; indicted for spreading “fake news” about the Russian army. Reported, among other topics, on the massacre in Bucha. Now facing a sentence of 10 years.
Helsingin Sanomat’s reporter Petteri Tuohinen and photographer Kalle Koponen were in Bucha, north of Kyiv, when the cruelties of the Russian army were starting to come to light.
The massacre was not fake news. It all happened.
People had been shot on the street. There was a mass grave of civilians behind a church. At least some of the victims had their hands tied behind their back.
Russian media also covered the events taking place in Bucha, but their perspective differed drastically from that featured in other countries.
The TV channels Zvezda and Izvestia both featured a news item from Bucha on 4 April 2022. Both channels offered lengthy citations from sources representing the Russian Ministry of Defence, repeating the same message:
The Ukrainian army brought the dead bodies to the city and placed them on the streets. The Russians didn’t do any harm in Bucha; instead, they helped the local citizens.
In Russia, independent media have been replaced by a continuous flow of propaganda from state-owned television channels. They portray Russia’s actions in Ukraine as a heroic battle against terrorism.
According to surveys considered to be reliable, more than 50% of Russians support the war in Ukraine.
When free press has been suppressed, President Vladimir Putin’s government can display the war in the way they desire: emphasising its heroic nature and downplaying its victims.
CCounter-Strike is a first-person shooter game, i.e. the player views the game environment through the eyes of their avatar. They can run through doors and hit walls.
They have guns and ammunition. If they’re hit, they die.
The moment of death is decisive for Helsingin Sanomat’s secret room.
When a player’s avatar dies, the game view changes: For a while, the player can go through walls or fly around the map. At this stage, they can also find the secret room hidden underground.
The room is hidden near a monument of eternal flame. Eternal flame monuments are common in Russian and Ukrainian cities. They serve as memorials of WW2, or the Great Patriotic War, as it is called in Russia.
In Helsingin Sanomat’s Counter-Strike map, the flame has a different motive. Ukrainian and Russian villages are quite similar. The purpose is to make Russians see that the terrors of war are happening in places that look very familiar to them.
There is a light above the door. This is a hint that taking a closer look at the object may reveal something.
There are stairs leading to an underground room.
First, the player sees a wall with a headline.
Next to the headline, there is a map showing how many civilian targets in Ukraine have been hit by Russians.
Another wall displays a news item on the Bucha massacre. When the player comes close to the images, they hear a Russian voice-over on their radio telling them what the images are about: Ukrainian civilians murdered by Russian soldiers.
Another news item is about a Ukrainian man called Yuriy Glodan. He went out for groceries, and meanwhile a Russian missile killed his family. Helsingin Sanomat’s reporter Katriina Pajari and photographer Rio Gandara met Glodan in Odessa in May 2022.
The story of the Glodan family has never been told to Russians.
The Russian state media have also remained quiet about the Russians who have died in the war. Precise victim counts are impossible to get, because all parties are downplaying their losses and exaggerating those of the opponent. Therefore, estimates also vary.
The table on the secret Counter-Strike room displays the most reliable figure that Helsingin Sanomat has been able to find: 70,000 Russians dead.
The secret room was released to Counter-Strike players on 2 May 2023. At the moment of publishing this article, it is just starting to gain attention.
The designers of the map say that they are proud of their work. “To be able to be involved in making such a map with a humanitarian purpose connected to the real world.”
They don’t want to disclose their names, because they are worried about Russian players’ reactions. They might be harassed and their work could be hindered due to releasing the map.
Both of them have designed hundreds of Counter-Strike maps but never anything like this.
“Russia’s senseless aggression on Ukraine has killed tens of thousands of civilians, including children. The least we can do is to bring Putin’s war crimes and Russian propaganda to light.”
If you want to support the spreading of Helsingin Sanomat’s map, play it on Counter-Strike, or take a screenshot of the prompt below and share it to players you know.
Do you want to support the freedom of press in Russia? Here’s what you can do:
The HS map is called de_voyna.
Find the map in Counter-Strike under Workshop maps.
Play! Try to get Russian players playing.”


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