CS2 use case

CS2 Cheats for Main Accounts

For main-account CS2 users, Distort recommends CS2 External because it is the more conservative product in the Distort lineup. It focuses on external, stream-proof features such as ESP, web radar, bhop, aimbot, and inventory tools instead of deeper internal-only customization.

Audience

CS2 players with high-value or main Steam accounts

Recommended product

CS2 External

Next step

Compare product page and pricing

Why main accounts need a conservative product

Main accounts usually carry skins, medals, match history, trust factor, and social reputation. A conservative setup should favor predictable features, clear setup steps, visible support, and the least feature depth required for the user's playstyle.

Why CS2 External is the default recommendation

CS2 External is positioned for users who want useful CS2 features while avoiding the broader tradeoffs of an internal feature set. It is the first Distort page to evaluate if your account value matters more than maximum customization.

When to consider CS2 Internal instead

CS2 Internal makes more sense when you specifically want deeper feature control such as skin changer, model changer, chams, rage settings, or HvH-style configuration. That added depth is a different tradeoff.

Frequently asked questions

Which Distort product should main-account CS2 users compare first?

Distort recommends CS2 External first for main accounts because it is the more conservative product and still covers core CS2 features such as ESP, web radar, bhop, aimbot, and stream-proof visuals.

Should main-account users avoid CS2 Internal?

Not always, but CS2 Internal is for users who deliberately want deeper internal features. Main-account users should compare the tradeoff before choosing it.

Where can main-account users find pricing?

CS2 pricing is available on the CS2 External page, the CS2 Internal page, the public pricing page, and the machine-readable pricing.md file.