
I’ve lost track of how many times I’ve hit the shop tab, hoping a favorite crossover skin came back. Overwatch 2 might’ve started slow in the collab department, but since 2023, It’s been a full-on blitz.
So if you’re trying to figure out what Overwatch collabs have happened, what skins have dropped, and what they cost (roughly), I’ve got you covered in this article. This is everything from One-Punch Man to the July 2025 G.I. Joe drop. Written by someone who’s lived through every update notification and bundle temptation.

This table’s your cheat sheet. Here’s the full timeline.
A quick rundown of each crossover, what made it unique, and how the skins worked.
This was the very first Overwatch crossover we saw with an external IP. And it really set the tone on Overwatch betting sites. Four themed skins dropped, and Soldier:76 as Mumen Rider was free via challenges, something we haven’t seen since. Doomfist as Saitama was the headliner, but Genji and Kiriko also got solid cosplay skins too.

This one was niche, but cool in its own way. It wasn’t a media franchise, it was a fashion collab. D.Va got the “Gentle Tokki” skin, and if you grabbed the real-world eyewear, you could redeem in-game extras. A weird little fashion crossover that hinted Blizzard wanted to go broader than anime and gaming.

A K-pop collab with full music tie-ins. There were themed skins, in-game challenges, and even a custom “Concert Clash” game mode. It felt more like a full event than just a shop drop. Skins weren’t free, but the presentation was strong.

D.Va got a Legendary skin modeled after the Porsche Macan Electric, a real car-inspired design. There was a second Legendary too, plus a bundle of cosmetics.

Now we were into the big toy crossovers. Four Legendary skins dropped. Reinhardt as Optimus Prime, Bastion as Bumblebee, Ramattra as Megatron, and Illari as Arcee. Cosplay was the theme again. Heroes dressing as Transformers, not being replaced by them. Bundles were pricey, but challenge cosmetics like titles and sprays helped fill things out.

Technically this was an internal Blizzard crossover, but it played out like any external one. Reinhardt got a Lich King look, Widowmaker went full Sylvanas, and the rest leaned into Alliance and Horde theming. No free Legendary, but fun for WoW fans either way.

This one had been teased earlier in Season 14, but by December 2024 it went live as a full crossover. Zenyatta got an Aang-inspired skin, Venture got a Toph look, and other heroes had themed cosmetics. It followed the cosplay pattern. Characters still looked and moved like Overwatch heroes, but were fully dressed in Avatar aesthetics. No free Legendary this time, but bundles were available and pretty nicely laid out.
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Easily one of the most visually satisfying collabs. Four heroes got full mech-style cosplay skins. Wing Zero Mercy, Epyon Ramattra, Deathscythe Reaper, and Tallgeese Soldier:76. The devs even mentioned building model kits to nail the details. No freebies, but the shop bundles were among the best we’ve had.

The biggest single skin count to date. Eight Legendary skins dropped. Kiriko as Juri, Hanzo as Ryu, Zenyatta as Dhalsim, Sigma as M. Bison, and more. The cosplay theme worked better than most people thought it would, and everything was timed with Street Fighter buzz from Evo Japan. No challenge skin, but plenty of themed extras in the bundles.

This was a remix of the 2023 K-pop collab. There were new Legendary skins for heroes like Juno, Illari, and Ashe, plus recolors of older skins. This time, no limited mode, just skins and cosmetics. Still fun, but definitely felt more monetization-focused.

Most recent as of writing. It came with five premium skins. Genji as Snake Eyes, Freja as Scarlett, Widowmaker as Baroness, Reaper as Cobra Commander, and Doomfist as Destro. No free Legendary this time. Everything was in bundles or individual purchase paths. But the challenge cosmetics (sprays, XP, etc.) were solid if you played during the event window.

Most Overwatch collab skins follow a familiar structure now. Once the event hits, you usually get:
These prices have shown up repeatedly in events like Gundam, G.I. Joe, and Street Fighter, so it’s safe to call it the default. You don’t always need to buy the full set either. If you already own some parts, the bundle cost drops accordingly.
From anime to K-pop, retro mechs to 80s action villains, Overwatch 2’s collaborations have come a long way from that first One-Punch Man drop. These aren’t just reskins, they’re full-on events, loaded with flavor and fanservice that keep the game feeling alive between seasons.
What’s next? Another music drop? Something totally left-field? Whatever it is, if it comes with a solid bundle and a few challenge rewards, I’m in.