Alpha

CS2 case farming bot.

An automated CS2 farming bot that runs many Steam accounts in hardware-isolated Hyper-V VMs, with a custom walkbot and a Telegram mini-app for remote control. Alpha pricing from $6.99 per VM per month.

MonkePanel is a CS2 case farming bot for Windows. It runs many Steam accounts on a single host, each isolated in its own Hyper-V virtual machine with a partitioned GPU and a distinct hardware fingerprint. The bot handles login, runs a custom walkbot so accounts move like real players, and collects weekly drops and rank rewards automatically. A Telegram mini-app gives you start, stop, and live status from your phone. Currently in alpha with paid plans from $6.99 per VM per month.

Panel schematic

One row per account. Status, mode, load, drops.

A schematic of what the dashboard surfaces while six accounts run in parallel. Each row maps to one isolated VM. DM and Wingman accounts are mixed in the same farm and color-coded by mode.

What the panel looks like with six accounts active. One row per account, color-coded by mode. Cyan rows are DM accounts, violet rows are Wingman accounts. The Drops column shows whether this week's case has been collected. Full multi-account control patterns live in multi-account control and the multi-account farming guide.

How the bot works in three steps.

An automated CS2 farming bot is only as good as its account-isolation and movement model. MonkePanel handles both in one panel, so you do not have to build either yourself.

01

You hand off accounts

Provide your Steam credentials and maFiles. The panel never asks you to share passwords in plain text outside the panel itself.

02

Each account gets its own VM

The bot spins each Steam account in its own Hyper-V VM with a partitioned GPU. Each VM has a distinct hardware fingerprint, so Steam sees a separate machine per account.

03

The walkbot keeps them in-game

The walkbot keeps every account inside a real CS2 session so playtime registers. Weekly case drops and rank rewards are claimed automatically once eligible.

A walkbot built to move like a real player.

Walkbot quality is the single biggest factor in farm-account longevity. Most public CS2 farming bots use fixed waypoint loops, which look exactly like what they are over hundreds of sessions. MonkePanel's walkbot computes each step using real-time pathfinding across the walkable areas of every map, with humanized step timing and view-cone wobble. We ship the walkbot patched alongside CS2 itself, because map geometry shifts with every Valve update.

  • Real-time pathfinding

    Paths are computed live across the walkable regions of every map. No replay of recorded loops.

  • Humanized timing and view

    Step timing wobbles. View-cone direction varies. No fixed reaction latency, no robotic precision.

  • Patched with every CS2 update

    Map geometry changes; we ship the matching update. A walkbot that breaks on the new map stops being humanized.

Hardware-isolated accounts.

The reason ten farm accounts logged into one Windows machine get banned together is fingerprint correlation. Steam reads a cluster of hardware identifiers at every login, and a shared fingerprint means a shared fate. MonkePanel solves it at the VM level: every account runs inside its own Hyper-V virtual machine with a partitioned GPU and a distinct hardware fingerprint. Different CPU model, different MAC address, different disk serial, different GPU device ID. Steam sees a separate machine each time, and a single ban does not cascade across the cluster. This is layered defense, not magic. Read the hardware fingerprint glossary entry for the full identifier list.

Multi-account control from one panel.

One window manages every account in your farm. Add, remove, start, stop, monitor, bulk-action. Per-account log view. Host-side CPU, RAM, GPU, and disk readout. The panel handles the orchestration; you handle the strategy.

Auto-collect weekly drops and rank rewards.

The weekly case drop, end-of-rank rewards, and Armory pass progression where eligible are claimed automatically. No manual collection runs, no missed weeks, no logging in to thirty accounts on a Sunday. Supported modes: Deathmatch and Wingman, each with its own walkbot profile and trade-offs.

Control the bot from your phone.

The Telegram mini-app talks to the bot running on your host. Start and stop the farm, change every setting the desktop panel exposes, see live CPU, RAM, and GPU readings per VM, all from your phone. Useful when the host is in a closet at home and you are not.

Account safety, honestly framed.

Automating Steam carries real risk. We use several methods in parallel to keep that risk as low as we practically can: per-account hardware fingerprint isolation, behavior built to look like a real player, and layered detection-resistance. None of this makes the bot risk-free. The March 2026 ban wave alone removed close to a million accounts. If you cannot tolerate the loss of every Steam account you would farm with, do not use this bot. We publish ban-wave observations and recurring operator mistakes on the blog.

System requirements.

MonkePanel runs on Windows. The bot itself is light; the VMs it manages need real hardware. Hyper-V is a kernel-level hypervisor that ships with Windows Pro and above, which is what lets the VMs perform well enough to actually host CS2.

  • Windows 10/11 Pro, Enterprise, or Education

    Home edition does not include Hyper-V. Read Microsoft's Hyper-V overview.

  • CPU with virtualization

    Intel VT-x/VT-d or AMD-V/AMD-Vi, enabled in BIOS.

  • Discrete GPU with partitioning support

    NVIDIA GTX 1060 / AMD RX 480 or newer recommended. Microsoft's GPU partitioning docs.

  • ~6 GB RAM per VM (rough sizing)

    Full step-by-step in the setup guide.

Pricing.

Alpha pricing starts at $6.99 per VM per month. See pricing on the homepage.

Get started

Alpha pricing starts at $6.99 per VM per month. Full plans live on the homepage.

See pricing →

FAQ.

Is this CS2 case farming bot safe for my accounts?

Automating Steam always carries risk. MonkePanel uses hardware-isolated Hyper-V virtual machines, a natural-movement walkbot, and layered detection-resistance to lower that risk, but no method makes farming risk-free. The March 2026 ban wave removed close to a million accounts. Treat every farm account as expendable, and before scaling, read is CS2 case farming worth it in 2026 for the ban-loss-aware framework that decides whether the bot makes sense on your hardware.

What hardware do I need to run the bot?

A Windows 10 or 11 Pro, Enterprise, or Education host with CPU virtualization (VT-x or AMD-V), a discrete GPU that supports partitioning (GTX 1060 / RX 480 or newer), and roughly 6 GB RAM per running VM. Home edition does not include Hyper-V. Full setup is in the setup guide.

How many Steam accounts can I farm at once?

The panel itself does not impose a hard limit. The ceiling is your host hardware (CPU cores, GPU partitions, RAM, disk IOPS). A mid-range desktop comfortably runs a handful of accounts; a dedicated farm-build runs many more. To model your own numbers (Prime cost, ban-loss rate, drop value, account count), plug your inputs into the CS2 case farming calculator before scaling.

Does the bot require Prime Status on every account?

Yes, for the weekly case drop. Since Valve's 2024 change, weekly drops only register on Prime accounts. Non-Prime accounts can still farm XP and rank rewards but not the case itself.

Can I control the farm from my phone?

Yes. The Telegram mini-app starts and stops the panel, exposes per-VM live CPU, RAM, and GPU readings, and lets you change every setting the desktop panel exposes.

Where does the bot fit in the broader case farming strategy?

The bot is the execution layer. The decisions around mode selection, multi-account scaling, Prime cost, and weekly drop math sit on top of it. For the category overview, see the CS2 case farming hub, which links the mode and mechanic pages (Deathmatch, Wingman, weekly drop, Armory Pass, XP) and the risk-aware operator content.

Get the bot

Alpha pricing from $6.99 per VM per month. See pricing on the homepage.

Message @monkecs