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Every interaction online is a choice about what kind of energy you bring into the world. Adding kindness costs nothing, but it makes communities and people a lot better.
At the end of the day, we're just strangers playing a game for fun. The match ended, everyone moved on, but you still chose to spend extra time spreading negativity. I’d genuinely encourage you to ask yourself why that felt worth doing, and whether that’s the kind of energy you actually want to put into the world or into communities you’re part of.
I’m not writing this because I’m hurt or looking for an apology. I’m writing it because moments like this are small choices that shape the kind of person we become over time, and it's important that we as human beings spread kindness and love to each others. Because if we don't, we will never advance towards a brighter future together - we'll only repeat the same old mistakes, cruelty, wars, inequality - it's all because we're never able to agree with each others, but rather choose violence due to anger and hate. It’s easy to be cruel when there are no consequences and anonymity protects your real identity.
So after a CS2 premier match you went to visit my profile and leave a comment calling someone in my profile picture “-rep the ugliest human being alive.” That wasn’t trash talk during a match, the game was already over.
At that point it stops being inappropriate jokes and becomes a deliberate choice to spread negativity toward a real person you don’t know.
The thing is, words online don’t exist in a vacuum. Behind every profile picture is an actual human being with feelings, relationships, and a life completely separate from a video game lobby. You didn’t insult a character or a playstyle, but instead you targeted someone’s appearance purely to hurt or provoke. The intention behind going out of your way to post it says more about the mindset of the person writing it than the person receiving it. No further explanations needed.