CS2 Beta Update Brings Animgraph 2 Third-Person Animations

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News/CS2 Beta Update Brings Animgraph 2 Third-Person Animations







CS2 Beta Update Brings Animgraph 2 Third-Person Animations

More

01 April 2026 23:58

TL;DR

  • Valve has released a CS2 beta build on the "animgraph_2_beta" Steam branch adding newly redone third-person animations built on the Animgraph 2 system, completing the rollout that began with first-person animations in July 2025.
  • The third-person animations were "in many cases, adjusted in response to player feedback," according to Valve, who is now actively requesting community testing and further input on the beta branch before a full release.


Valve is finishing what it started last summer. The Animgraph 2 animation system began rolling out to CS2 with first-person animations in late July 2025, covering the reload, inspect, deploy, and firing animations that players see hundreds of times per session. Now the second piece is here: third-person animations, live in beta and open for feedback.

This is how Valve typically handles significant visual system changes in CS2. Push it to a beta branch, let players who care deeply about how the game moves and looks stress-test it, gather feedback, iterate, and then ship to the main build.

What Animgraph 2 Actually Changes

Animgraph 2 is Valve's updated animation graph system, replacing the underlying architecture that drives how characters and weapons move in the game. The practical impact for players is smoother, more responsive, and more visually consistent animations that better represent what's actually happening mechanically.

The first-person update last July was a significant visual overhaul for how weapons feel to use. If you play CS2 regularly, you noticed it. Reload animations felt more grounded, fire animations had more weight, and the overall feel of each weapon became more distinct. Third-person animations are what every other player sees when they watch your character.

Movement, weapon handling, crouching, jumping, getting hit. These are the animations that matter for readability in competitive play as much as for visual quality. If third-person animations are janky or inconsistent, it creates noise in a game where reading opponent positions and movements clearly is a competitive skill in itself.

How to Access the Beta

To try the Animgraph 2 third-person animations, opt into the "animgraph_2_beta" branch for Counter-Strike 2 through Steam. Right-click CS2 in your library, go to Properties, select the Betas tab, and choose the animgraph_2_beta entry from the dropdown. Valve has published a guide for anyone who hasn't done this before.

Once you're in, Valve wants your feedback. The whole point of the beta branch approach is that competitive players, casual players, and observers all notice different things.


More:Vitality Win BLAST Open Rotterdam With 3-0 Sweep of NaVi, Extend Map Streak to 22

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CS2 Beta Update Brings Animgraph 2 Third-Person Animations

More

01 April 2026 23:58

TL;DR

  • Valve has released a CS2 beta build on the "animgraph_2_beta" Steam branch adding newly redone third-person animations built on the Animgraph 2 system, completing the rollout that began with first-person animations in July 2025.
  • The third-person animations were "in many cases, adjusted in response to player feedback," according to Valve, who is now actively requesting community testing and further input on the beta branch before a full release.


Valve is finishing what it started last summer. The Animgraph 2 animation system began rolling out to CS2 with first-person animations in late July 2025, covering the reload, inspect, deploy, and firing animations that players see hundreds of times per session. Now the second piece is here: third-person animations, live in beta and open for feedback.

This is how Valve typically handles significant visual system changes in CS2. Push it to a beta branch, let players who care deeply about how the game moves and looks stress-test it, gather feedback, iterate, and then ship to the main build.

What Animgraph 2 Actually Changes

Animgraph 2 is Valve's updated animation graph system, replacing the underlying architecture that drives how characters and weapons move in the game. The practical impact for players is smoother, more responsive, and more visually consistent animations that better represent what's actually happening mechanically.

The first-person update last July was a significant visual overhaul for how weapons feel to use. If you play CS2 regularly, you noticed it. Reload animations felt more grounded, fire animations had more weight, and the overall feel of each weapon became more distinct. Third-person animations are what every other player sees when they watch your character.

Movement, weapon handling, crouching, jumping, getting hit. These are the animations that matter for readability in competitive play as much as for visual quality. If third-person animations are janky or inconsistent, it creates noise in a game where reading opponent positions and movements clearly is a competitive skill in itself.

How to Access the Beta

To try the Animgraph 2 third-person animations, opt into the "animgraph_2_beta" branch for Counter-Strike 2 through Steam. Right-click CS2 in your library, go to Properties, select the Betas tab, and choose the animgraph_2_beta entry from the dropdown. Valve has published a guide for anyone who hasn't done this before.

Once you're in, Valve wants your feedback. The whole point of the beta branch approach is that competitive players, casual players, and observers all notice different things.


More:Vitality Win BLAST Open Rotterdam With 3-0 Sweep of NaVi, Extend Map Streak to 22

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