Steam / DirectX
While I was playing Counter Strike: Global Offensive, I got kicked from the game. The reason I got kicked is that Steam displayed me VAC ban warning. They told me to verify CS:GO game files which I did. And every time I verify after around 2 hours I can play game (competitive or wingman) and again same thing happens. Every time I got "VAC BAN WARNING" when I verify, I got feedback that 1 or 2 files are missing when I start the game. Every time Microsoft DirectX is updating or installing every single time. I tried all Reinstall Steam/CSGO, updated windows, watched Youtube clips but nothing. So my guess is that Microsoft DirectX is somehow guilty but I don't know how to solve it.
Best Answer
Check your anti-virus. Perhaps it gave a false-positive to a DirectX file and quarantined the file, if it didn't just remove it. Afterwards, add the CS:GO folder as an exception in your anti-virus so it doesn't happen again.
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What is Steam DirectX?
DirectX is a series of application programming interfaces (API) that provide low-level access to hardware components like video cards, the sound card, and memory. If that sounded too complex, let's break things down. At a basic level, DirectX allows games to "talk" to video cards.Does Steam use DirectX?
Valve blames Microsoft. Valve has explained why Steam installs DirectX every time you install a different game - even an old one from years ago. It's not an error, nor is it to do with checking that your DirectX installation is up to date. Rather, it's to do with how Microsoft packages the software.How do I get DirectX on Steam?
The easiest way to update DirectX is to use Windows Update....How do I use DirectX 12 on Steam?
Click Settings to open game options. Scroll down the Video tab to the DirectX Version option. Click the arrow button for the DirectX Version setting to select DirectX 12 (Beta). Press the Confirm button.CS:GO installing directx everytime solution WORKING 100% - 2020
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: David Vives, Ron Lach, Stephen Taylor, Fatih Al Haq
