At 59, She Outplays CS2 Pros — and Redefins Who Gets to Game
When CS2 superstar donk peeked the corner, he didn't expect to be one-tapped by a 59-year-old Chinese woman whose days were once spent tending plants and running errands.
The moment, unfolding during a lighthearted Counter-Strike 2 exhibition match in early 2025, quickly became one of the most talked-about clips in China's gaming community.
Organized by Bilibili creator "One-shot Man," the event featured top-tier guests, including Russian esports powerhouse Team Spirit and CS2 superstar donk, alongside retired French legend kennyS. But the highlight did not come from the pros.
It came from a 59-year-old streamer known online as "Aunty Juan," whose real name is Zhang Juan.
During the match, Zhang calmly dispatched donk with a clean headshot, then eliminated Team Spirit's sh1ro while he was mid-air. The clip spread rapidly, leaving many viewers convinced it must have been scripted.
It wasn't.
As play continued, Team Spirit player magixx checked Zhang's profile in disbelief. Her clip from the match had already amassed hundreds of likes, and more details soon emerged: Zhang had logged more than 7,000 hours in Counter-Strike. That figure might be unremarkable for a teenager. For someone approaching 60, it told a very different story.
Zhang was a senior CNC machine operator with two decades of hands-on experience. That technical background honed her exceptional focus and hand–eye coordination, skills that now clearly shine through in her performance in FPS games.
Zhang first picked up Counter-Strike during COVID-19 lockdowns. Bored after months spent singing at home and tending plants, she asked her son to teach her, reported by gaming outlet Taptap.
She didn't know how to turn the camera, kept walking into walls, couldn't jump, and even felt motion sickness, her son said. Watching her struggle with basic controls reminded him of a baby learning to walk.
What surprised him most was her seriousness.
She was having fun even just pressing "W" to move, he recalled.
They started with simple drills — running, jumping and learning the controls — avoiding real players to prevent frustration. Zhang then moved on to aim training maps, shooting balloons daily, before practicing against bots.
The training was repetitive and dull. Zhang didn't mind.
She played 5 to 6 hours a day.
She stopped only to buy groceries or cook, her son said. She even neglected her plants.
Worried she was playing too much, he eventually set their Wi-Fi router to disconnect automatically at 2am.
Once comfortable, Zhang entered deathmatch mode, where players respawn instantly and focus purely on aim. She began learning positioning, timing, reloading strategies and grenade usage – all under her son's detailed guidance.
She livestreamed the entire process.
Her audience grew from a handful of viewers to thousands, giving the retired woman a new identity: a Counter-Strike streamer.
To Zhang, playing in front of others felt thrilling. Though not particularly social in daily life, she said the screen gave her energy.
"I guess I'm someone who gets excited when people are watching," she laughed.
Her son, however, struggled with the decision to let his mother appear on camera. Esports audiences, after all, are notoriously unforgiving.
No son wants his mother to be insulted online just for playing games, he said.
But viewers soon rallied around her, sharing stories of parents gaming well into their 60s and 70s.
"Games don't belong exclusively to young people," read one comment.
"I've always loved playing," she said. As a child, she ran barefoot through streams, climbed trees and watched outdoor war films like Tunnel Warfare and Battle on Shangganling over and over again.
"Maybe that's why I like shooting games," she joked.
To her, gaming is no different from mahjong or square dancing — just another generation's version of play.
"They invite me to dance sometimes," she said. "But I know I wouldn't be good at it. Being alone feels more comfortable."
In 2022, as her popularity grew, Zhang was signed by a domestic streaming agency. The income was modest, but enough to cover electricity bills – and ease family expenses in her hometown of Meizhou in Guangdong Province.
She began traveling nationwide for offline gaming events.
"In Beijing, I saw the Forbidden City. In Hangzhou, West Lake. In Shanghai, the Bund — and I even checked out huge EVA and Gundam installation with my son."
"The first step might be hard," she said. "But if you take it, you might just open up a whole new world."
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