By binding your mouse wheel to duck and jump, lowering your FPS parameters to stable competitive limits (like fps_max 99.5 or 101 ), and practicing your strafe timing, you can master the Stand-Up Ground Strafe legitimately.

, this script automates ducking while you hold a specific key (in this case, 'V'): autohotkey

| Source | Reliability | Risk Level | |--------|-------------|-------------| | GameBanana (CS 1.6 section) | High | Low | | CS.BG-Forum | Medium | Low | | ProCS (archived scripts) | Medium | Low | | YouTube video descriptions | Low | High (often fake) | | Random file hosts (MediaFire, Mega) | Low | Medium-High |

An is essentially an alias command in the game console. It binds the entire sequence (Duck-Strafe-Stand-up) to a single mouse button (usually mwheeldown or mwheelup ).

If you prefer not to use external software, add this to your userconfig.cfg file located in cstrike/userconfig.cfg .

For those looking for external tools or more complex macros, several community-driven resources provide downloadable links:

There is no single official script link from the original SGS developers. Most script links are shared on gaming forums, Discord servers, or file-hosting sites. However, many links contain malware or outdated configurations.

External macros can trigger hard bans from competitive leagues and anti-cheat clients.

SGS involves a complex sequence of commands performed in rapid succession: to lower the hitbox. Strafing left or right.

It involves rapidly crouching and uncrouching while performing ground strafes.

Because executing this manually requires flawless, near-inhuman keyboard inputs, many players look for a to automate the process. Below is a comprehensive guide to understanding SGS, how the scripts work, the necessary console configurations, and the risks involved in using them. What is SGS in CS 1.6?