Valve announced back in September that it was cracking down on DOTA 2 players using smurf accounts. That ban wave took out 90,000 accounts, but it seems the company wasn't finished yet.
There was a time when a slight tweak to a forest path would send my Dota 2 clan’s heads into a collective spin. Valve’s venerable MOBA used to be much more conservative with map changes, and big ones ...
Once a year or so, Valve has a tendency to throw away the built-up metas and rework large parts of its hugely popular MOBA experience, DOTA 2. That's exactly what has happened with the new ...
A post on Reddit revealed that Steam doesn't just reward honest users for reporting bugs; it also pays people to find flaws ...
"Dota 2 has seen so many massive overhauls and ... then people will play the game regardless." Map changes aside, Valve took the wrench to a lot of Deadlock with this recent update.
Valve dropped the ban hammer on over 40,000 Dota 2 accounts for using third-party software that gave them an advantage in the game. In what is the biggest ban wave in Dota 2, the players got caught ...
Valve has introduced a raft of changes in the just-released Wandering Waters update, reworking the objectives and overhauling the Dota 2 gameplay. Patch 7.38 has a revamped mobile Roshan ...
Dota 2 summer client update brings a new Collector’s Cache and numerous quality of life improvements, including a revamped armory and much-needed changes to the report system and matchmaking. Valve ...
Several updates were also applied to a range of heroes. Valve has released a February 2025 patch for the MOBA Dota 2, encouraging players to explore the Wandering Waters in the 7.38 Gameplay Update.
Dota 2 has had a firecracker few years ... The developers have, frankly, slipped the leash. Valve's got no control of them anymore. They can't, as evinced by the latest update: 7.38, Wandering ...