Skinned.txt — Been#6969 Eu
The cold, artificial blue light of the monitor was the only illumination in Leo’s room. It was 3:00 AM, the hour of the desperate gamer. On his screen, a discord message notification chimed—a message from a user known only as . The file attached was named: "EU_skinned.txt" .
Leo shouldn't have opened it. He knew the risks. But Been was a notorious, albeit shadowy, figure in the competitive Valorant scene, known for selling high-end, undetected cosmetic skins that didn't exist in the official store—skins that looked, felt, and played differently. He downloaded the file. Been#6969 EU skinned.txt
But the reports didn't work. When Leo tried to look at the scoreboard, the names of the enemy players were missing. Only his name remained, and underneath it, a score of 999-0 . The cold, artificial blue light of the monitor
The screen didn't freeze, but the music died. The bright, energetic Valorant lobby music was replaced by a low-frequency hum, a sound that felt like it was vibrating his skull rather than coming from his speakers. He queued into a competitive match on . The file attached was named: "EU_skinned
“Your account is mine now, Leo,” Been’s voice hummed in his ears. “And you… you are part of the skin.”
If you want to know what happened to Leo next, or if you're curious about who really is, let me know!
When the loading screen finished, Leo realized something was deeply wrong. The map was dark, stripped of its vibrant colors. The textures were raw, white-grey wireframes. And his Vandal? It wasn’t a gun anymore. It was a shifting, impossible shape, like looking at a tear in the fabric of the game itself.