G2 are on the lookout for loan offers for their G2 Ares player Vilius “tAk” Keserauskas, the organisation confirmed to HLTV on 24 June 2026. The 21-year-old Lithuanian rifler has grown into the main star of G2’s junior squad, and the org now wants to move him into regular competition outside the academy system to accelerate his development in Counter-Strike 2.
G2 pointed directly to the loan of academy player kl1m to MIBR as the template for the move, having seen that path work for a young player coming through their pipeline.
Who Is tAk And Why G2 Want To Loan Him
tAk has been part of G2 Ares, the organisation’s Counter-Strike 2 academy team, since July 2024, growing into the main star of the side and averaging a 1.18 rating in 2026 in high-output positions. Born on 21 December 2004, the 21-year-old has recently graduated from university, which G2 framed as a key reason he is now ready to commit fully to professional play. His career prize earnings sit at roughly $8,960.
tAk already got a brief taste of tier-one Counter-Strike at IEM Rio, where he stood in for Nemanja “huNter-” Kovac at short notice after the Bosnian captain was sidelined by an injury. G2 now want to develop him further in the upper echelons of the game through a loan rather than keeping him inside the academy.
What G2 Manager peca Said
G2 manager Petar “peca” Markovic set out the reasoning behind the search for offers.
“tAk is a vocal, versatile, hungry player who is ready to take more responsibility. With him graduating from university, he is also in a position to fully focus on the next step in his career.”
Markovic also pointed to the precedent G2 set with kl1m, who was loaned to the Brazilian squad MIBR.
“We have already seen the loan path working well with kl1m in MIBR. It proved that the right project, regular officials, and a clear role can be the perfect next step for a young player coming through our academy system. We believe the same path makes sense for tAk as well.”
The MIBR Precedent And What Comes Next
G2’s reasoning rests on the kl1m move, which the org views as proof that a loan to the right project with regular official matches and a defined role can bridge the gap between academy play and the demands of professional Counter-Strike 2. For tAk, a loan addresses that same gap, letting him take on a starter role and consistent reps that academy competition cannot supply.
The search for loan offers is now open, with no destination yet confirmed. G2’s next decision rests on which roster can give tAk the regular competition and clear role the org is looking for.
