Counter-Strike: Global Offensive

Tactical FPS highlights

Counter-Strike: Global Offensive highlights from saved recordings.

Splice supports classic CS:GO recordings too, helping surface clutches, sprays, AWP picks, and late-round retakes from existing capture folders.

01

Give older match recordings a second pass

If your drive has CS:GO sessions saved from ShadowPlay or OBS, Splice can scan those folders and help identify highlight candidates without changing the original files.

02

Designed around visible gameplay

Splice uses frame sampling and AI vision rather than a live match integration, so it can work with video files after the fact as long as the recording shows the action clearly.

03

Short clips for archives and montages

Extract compact local highlights from longer demos or recordings, then bring the best sequences into the editor when you want a multi-clip cut.

04

A feed that stays fresh

Published Explore clips expire after 14 days, keeping the public CS:GO page focused on recent uploads instead of stale archives.

No public clips right now

Be first to publish a Counter-Strike: Global Offensive highlight.

Explore clips are temporary and disappear after 14 days. Download Splice, capture your next play, and publish it when you are ready.

FAQ

Counter-Strike: Global Offensive questions, answered.

Can Splice process CS:GO clips I recorded years ago?

Yes. Because detection is video-based, you can point Splice at a folder of old CS:GO recordings and scan them on demand. The legacy profile still recognises the CS:GO killfeed so archived sprays and AWP picks get picked up.

Does Splice need a Counter-Strike: Global Offensive API or account?

No. Splice reads the recordings already on your drive and uses AI vision to read the screen, so it never connects to a Counter-Strike: Global Offensive account, game API, or stats service. The video file is the only input.

Does it work with NVIDIA ShadowPlay, OBS, and other recorders?

Yes. Splice watches the folder your captures land in — NVIDIA App / ShadowPlay, OBS, Medal, or any tool that writes MP4s — and processes new Counter-Strike: Global Offensive recordings as they appear. Your recording workflow does not change.

Are my Counter-Strike: Global Offensive clips uploaded anywhere?

No, not by default. Source recordings and extracted highlights stay on your machine. Publishing to the Explore feed is opt-in and per-clip; even then your local files are never moved or deleted, and published clips expire after 14 days.

Is Splice free?

The Windows app is free. AI analysis runs through your own OpenRouter key, so model usage is billed to you by your provider at cost — there is no Splice subscription or markup.

More games

Splice clips these too.

Local first

Turn your next Counter-Strike: Global Offensive session into clips.

Splice watches recording folders, creates local highlights, and only publishes clips when you choose to share them.