Music Kit Selective Response, No Love Only Pleasure
About Music Kit Selective Response, No Love Only Pleasure
Music Kit Selective Response, No Love Only Pleasure replaces CS2’s default soundtrack with electronic tracks built around heavy percussion and a dark, driving tempo. As a music kit rather than a weapon finish, it stands out through its full-match audio theme, affecting menu music and in-game cue moments with Selective Response’s industrial-leaning style.
Release & Source
The Music Kit Selective Response, No Love Only Pleasure is a High Grade-tier skin with an estimated drop chance of ~79.92%, making it one of the more common skins in CS2.
Popularity
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Frequently Asked Questions
Like other CS2 music kits, this kit replaces several in-game music cues rather than adding a single standalone track. It changes the main menu music, round start and round end themes, bomb plant and ten-second warning cues, MVP anthem, and other match-state stingers. The exact musical identity of this kit centers on Selective Response’s No Love Only Pleasure style across those gameplay moments.
The MVP anthem uses the same overall sound palette as the rest of the kit, so it feels consistent with the menu and match music. In CS2, the MVP track is the short music cue other players hear when you earn MVP at the end of a round. If you are choosing between kits, this is usually the most important part to preview because it is the clip heard most often in live matches.
CS2 music kits are primarily used as gameplay soundtrack replacements, so players usually refer to the included menu, MVP, and round-transition themes rather than a full vocal song release. Whether you hear clear lyrics depends on the specific sections used in-game, since many kits focus on instrumental or heavily produced excerpts. The best way to check is to preview the kit in-game or on the Steam Market listing if audio preview is available.
This kit is best judged by how its menu theme, bomb warning cue, and MVP anthem fit your personal audio preferences during regular play. Players who like electronic, alternative, or synth-driven kits often compare music kits by how distinct the MVP clip is and whether the ten-second bomb timer remains clear under pressure. If those cues sound readable to you while still having a style you want to hear repeatedly, this kit is a sensible pick.

