F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Guide CSGO Autoexec.cfg

Guide CSGO Autoexec.cfg

Guide CSGO Autoexec.cfg

P
Pottay
Member
50
08-09-2025, 03:35 PM
#1
Starting CSGO configuration changes via console can be tricky. I followed tutorials and built an autoexec.cfg, but it only functions once initially before stopping. I attempted fixes without success. The values seem to reset every time it fails. I've tried placing settings directly in config.cfg, modifying them manually, and even using a different config file. Still, the crosshair and binding remain unchanged. When I run "exec autoexec.cfg" without parentheses, it disappears entirely. It appears the system defaults everything back on each attempt.
P
Pottay
08-09-2025, 03:35 PM #1

Starting CSGO configuration changes via console can be tricky. I followed tutorials and built an autoexec.cfg, but it only functions once initially before stopping. I attempted fixes without success. The values seem to reset every time it fails. I've tried placing settings directly in config.cfg, modifying them manually, and even using a different config file. Still, the crosshair and binding remain unchanged. When I run "exec autoexec.cfg" without parentheses, it disappears entirely. It appears the system defaults everything back on each attempt.

F
Fred10244
Posting Freak
937
08-09-2025, 06:31 PM
#2
You might attempt to right-click the .cfg file, navigate to properties, and set one of the tabs to "Read Only" by checking the corresponding box. I’ll take a look around; since I haven’t played CS:GO recently, I’ll need to refresh my understanding of autoexec.
F
Fred10244
08-09-2025, 06:31 PM #2

You might attempt to right-click the .cfg file, navigate to properties, and set one of the tabs to "Read Only" by checking the corresponding box. I’ll take a look around; since I haven’t played CS:GO recently, I’ll need to refresh my understanding of autoexec.

O
OmqDace
Posting Freak
798
08-09-2025, 11:13 PM
#3
You might link a command such as w to navigate and also run the configuration file w with "+forward; exec autoexec.cfg". Consider placing exec autoexec.cfg in the autoexec folder.
O
OmqDace
08-09-2025, 11:13 PM #3

You might link a command such as w to navigate and also run the configuration file w with "+forward; exec autoexec.cfg". Consider placing exec autoexec.cfg in the autoexec folder.