Peter “dupreeh” Rasmussen has done something no other Counter-Strike player has managed: win five Major titles. The Danish rifler, who announced his retirement in June 2025, leaves the competitive scene holding the single most important record in the game’s history.
The road to five
Dupreeh’s Major collection started with Astralis, the Danish superteam that turned CS:GO’s competitive scene into something resembling a dynasty. His first title came at the ELEAGUE Major Atlanta in 2017, and Astralis kept the momentum rolling.
The FACEIT Major London in 2018 followed. Then came back-to-back wins at IEM Katowice 2019 and the StarLadder Major Berlin 2019. Four Majors with one roster.
After leaving Astralis, he joined Team Vitality and captured the BLAST.tv Paris Major in 2023. Winning a Major with a different organization proves the titles weren’t solely a product of the system around him.
A career measured in rounds, not just trophies
Dupreeh competed in 59,292 rounds over his career. He collected 32 trophies total. He earned two HLTV MVP awards.
He was also the first CS:GO player to surpass $2 million in career earnings, a milestone he hit as of October 2022.
Dupreeh played in 19 of the first 20 Majors in CS:GO history. His streak only ended at the PGL Major Copenhagen in 2024. His career spanned 4,310 days from start to finish.
The Astralis era and what came after
It’s impossible to talk about dupreeh without talking about Astralis. The Danish organization, built around a core of dupreeh, dev1ce, Xyp9x, gla1ve, and Magisk, redefined what a Counter-Strike team could be. During their peak in 2018 and 2019, Astralis approached the game with a level of tactical preparation that other teams simply couldn’t match. Dupreeh’s role as an aggressive rifler gave the team an entry threat that opponents had to account for in every round.
After transitioning from Astralis, dupreeh moved to Heroic and later joined Team Vitality. Vitality’s 2023 Paris Major title validated dupreeh as an individual talent beyond the Astralis ecosystem. His retirement in June 2025 closes a chapter that stretched across essentially the entire lifespan of CS:GO and into the early days of Counter-Strike 2.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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