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BC.Game Esports has officially benched krazy from its CS2 lineup

Rituraj Halder Published June 22, 2026
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Counter-Strike
krazy bc game esports

According to the latest announcements, it is official that BC.Game Esports has benched Portuguese rifler Adones “krazy” Nobre. With this move, BC.Game has brought a definitive end to his six-month tenure and completely dissolved the expensive ex-SAW core that they acquired at the start of the year.

krazy will no longer play for BC.Game

The official roster announcement, made via social media, marks a total breakdown of the team’s initial structural blueprint. Rumored to have cost up to $2.5 million in a buyout when finalized in January, the Portuguese core was originally intended to give BC.Game an immediate foundation in the global Counter-Strike 2 landscape.

Instead, Krazy follows his former teammates, Christopher “MUTiRiS” Fernandes and António “aragornN” Barbosa, to the bench just over two months after the duo was sidelined in April.

The roster change comes right after the catastrophic international campaigns that failed to justify the organization’s heavy financial investments. Despite an encouraging competitive debut at IEM Kraków early in the year, BC.Game went downhill very quickly, suffering winless, last-place exits at both IEM Atlanta and the Counter-Strike Asia Championships.

Individual performances consistently sagged under the pressure, with Krazy averaging a somewhat decent 0.93 HLTV rating throughout his time on the active lineup. Tactical adjustments, including the high-profile loan addition of Mongolian prodigy Azbayar “Senzu” Munkhbold and the deployment of team analyst Robin “ScrunK” Röpke as a temporary stand-in in-game leader, did absolutely nothing to reverse the squad’s downward spiral.

This latest benching plunges BC.Game into a severe competitive crisis regarding their institutional ranking. By removing krazy, the organization is left with only two permanent core members in global superstars Denis “electronic” Sharipov and Oleksandr “s1mple” Kostyliev.

Because the current roster configuration has only logged a total of four official matches together with Senzu and ScrunK, the team has fallen completely out of the upper tiers of Valve’s Regional Standings.

Missing the required multi-match core threshold means BC.Game has effectively become unranked, erasing their eligibility for direct tournament invites and forcing them to face the grueling prospect of qualifying through lower-tier brackets.

Head coach Wiktor “TaZ” Wojtas now faces the monumental task of rebuilding a functional five-man unit from the ground up during the competitive player break. The organization has not yet named a permanent replacement for krazy or specified how they intend to solve their very apparent lack of an established in-game leader.

Featured image credit: ESL

Rituraj Halder
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About Rituraj Halder
Rituraj is a games journalist, content creator, and gamer. He has been covering esports and gaming industry news for years, with his work published on several prominent outlets. Other than try-harding in online shooters, Rituraj loves to play obscure indie titles and narrative-heavy RPGs. Also, he is a big DnD nerd.
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