Natus Vincere, the esports organization better known as NAVI, posted a convincing 13-7 win on the Mirage map in a recent Counter-Strike 2 match. The team’s Counter-Terrorist side performance was the engine behind the result, and they’re now looking to carry that energy into the Anubis map.
Breaking down the Mirage performance
A 13-7 scoreline in CS2 tells a pretty clear story. In a game where 13 rounds wins the map, NAVI needed only the minimum to close things out while conceding just 7 rounds to their opponents.
The CT side, where players defend bomb sites rather than attack them, was where NAVI distinguished themselves. Playing CT on Mirage requires precise positioning, coordinated rotations, and the kind of utility usage that separates professional teams from everyone else.
Why Anubis matters next













