Astralis HooXi leaves social media following death threats after IEM Cologne Major 2026

Astralis HooXi

Losing a match in Counter-Strike 2 is always rough, but the internet has a special way of making a bad day at the office completely unhinged. Astralis captain Rasmus “HooXi” Nielsen has officially deleted his social media apps after a wave of toxic online harassment and actual death threats flooded his accounts.

The digital mob turned on the 27-year-old in-game leader immediately after Astralis suffered a shocking exit from IEM Cologne Major 2026. While fans have every right to be annoyed when their favorite squad drops a series, a vocal group of absolute maniacs decided that a bad tournament performance was justification for real-world threats.

HooXi decided he had better things to do than read unhinged essays in his direct messages, so he chose to completely disconnect from the online noise.

The False Dawn in Cologne

The tournament actually started out looking like a massive win for the Danish organization. Astralis took down GamerLegion in their opening match of Stage 2, giving fans a brief moment of hope before the wheels completely fell off the wagon. The team went on a brutal three-match losing streak, culminating in a devastating 1-3 elimination loss at the hands of paiN Gaming.

HooXi admitted after the match that the sudden exit left him completely in shock. He noted that the squad struggled to find their rhythm and had to fight tooth and nail just to keep rounds competitive. But in the modern esports ecosystem, the guy holding the tactical strategy board is usually the first person the community points the finger at when things go south.

Astralis was quick to put a protective wall around their shot-caller. Team owner Jonas Gundersen issued a blunt statement condemning the behavior, calling the online abuse completely unacceptable. The organization reminded the community that behind the digital avatars and professional jerseys, these players are just human beings doing their best under an immense amount of pressure.

Gundersen also took a swipe at social media platforms, calling for much tighter regulations and better moderation tools to protect players from toxic environments.

Unfortunately, this brand of severe digital toxicity has become a regular fixture of Tier 1 esports. Over in the League of Legends scene, T1 superstar Faker has faced multiple high-profile death threats over the years, to the point where local police had to actively investigate internet forums and beef up physical security at the arena.

The constant threat of community harassment is forcing major organizations to act like security firms. Earlier this year, Gen.G CEO Arnold Hur announced the creation of an entirely dedicated, in-house legal department. Their sole job is to track down anonymous online attackers and file lawsuits against anyone targeting their players or their families.

For Astralis, the immediate focus is keeping HooXi’s head in the game while they prepare for their next competitive appearance away from the digital keyboard.

If you are sending death threats to an in-game leader over a Counter-Strike match, you aren’t a passionate fan. You just need to go outside and touch some actual grass.

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