
I didn’t expect the Overwatch 2 x G.I. Joe crossover to go this hard. But it definitely did. When it dropped from July 1 to 14, I figured it’d be a quick nostalgia nod and move on. Instead, it landed with real style.
Between the skins, the themed bundles, and some solid challenge rewards, Blizzard actually made this feel like a proper event. Now that it’s wrapped up, here’s a full rundown. What dropped, how you could unlock it, and whether it was worth spending your coins while it lasted.

For two weeks in July 2025, Overwatch 2 players got dropped into a small but dense crossover with Hasbro’s G.I. Joe universe. The event ran from July 1 to July 14, and introduced five Legendary skins across two factions. G.I. Joe and Cobra.
The vibes on Overwatch betting sites were unmistakable. Military tactical, flashy without being overdone. It was clear Blizzard leaned hard into the “pick a side” theme. Joe vs Cobra was baked into everything, including the free reward titles and promo text.
Here’s the full list of skins that dropped during the event. Each one came with its own bundle, but more on that below.
The silent swordmaster got the full G.I. Joe treatment. All-black, slick, and built for stealth. It’s basically ninja Genji cranked up to 100.

Red hair, tactical armor, and serious main-character energy. This one felt like a love letter to support mains who want to show up loud.

Deadly, classy, and dangerous in heels. Baroness suits Widowmaker so well it’s almost scary. The all-black sniper energy is peak Cobra.

Probably the MVP of the drop. Reaper already has villain vibes, but this skin dials it way up. Full mask, cape, and that unmistakable blue. Dripping with menace.

Metal arms and a business suit? Somehow it totally works. Doomfist turns into a corporate bruiser here, and, it’s one of his better alt looks.

There were three main ways to grab these skins. As part of the G.I. Joe crossover Mega Bundle, through individual Hero Bundles, or standalone skins via the Hero Gallery. If you were all-in on the G.I Joe crossover, the Mega Bundle was the way to go. But if you only cared about one or two characters, Blizzard gave you some wiggle room.
| 🦸♂️ Hero (Skin) | 🔓 Unlock Methods | 📝 Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Genji (Snake Eyes) | Mega Bundle (5,900 Coins), Snake Eyes Bundle (2,800), Standalone Skin (1,900) | Includes themed cosmetics like name card & icon |
| Freja (Scarlett) | Mega Bundle (5,900 Coins), Scarlett Bundle (2,800), Standalone Skin (1,900) | Strong debut for Freja in crossover content |
| Reaper (Cobra Commander) | Mega Bundle (5,900 Coins), Cobra Commander Bundle (2,800), Standalone Skin (1,900) | Iconic villain look – full mask and cape |
| Widowmaker (Baroness) | Mega Bundle (5,900 Coins), Baroness Bundle (2,800), Standalone Skin (1,900) | Perfect synergy with Widowmaker’s style |
| Doomfist (Destro) | Mega Bundle (5,900 Coins), Destro Bundle (2,800), Standalone Skin (1,900) | Suited-up brawler with metallic arms – standout design |
So... was the Mega Bundle worth it? It depends on how many of these characters you actually use.
The math was pretty clear. If you wanted all five skins, the Mega Bundle at 5,900 Coins undercut the à la carte route. Individual bundles were 2,800 Coins each, and standalone skins sat at 1,900 Coins. So five individual hero bundles would’ve cost 14,000 total.
Even if you only liked three of the five, the Mega Bundle still offered solid value once you added up the cosmetics. Voice lines, name cards, highlight intros, and more. But if you just wanted Snake Eyes Genji or Destro Doomfist and didn’t care about the rest, you weren’t locked out. Standalone purchases were a smart call.

Even if you didn’t spend a single coin, the Special Ops event had a separate challenge track you could work through during the two-week window. These included:
You could get progress by playing Quick Play, Competitive, or Stadium mode. Wins counted for double progress, which made grinding feel less like a chore. Just to be clear, none of the five Legendary skins were free. You had to buy those. The challenges rewarded purely cosmetic extras.
This event came early in Overwatch 2 Season 17, which also featured a few other limited-time crossovers (Nerf collab being another big one), plus the new Flashpoint map Aatlis and the revamped map voting system.
It was a surprisingly packed start to the season. The G.I. Joe crossover event didn’t overstay its welcome. It was two weeks, and hit hard. Not every collab needs to dominate the entire season.

There’s already community chatter about who could join the G.I. Joe crossover roster next. One that popped up a lot was Soldier: 76 as Duke. Feels obvious, right? Military guy with a visor? We’ll see.
Polygon called out that future shop rotations or late-season bundles could bring more Cobra or Joe content, but nothing’s been confirmed yet. Just something to watch for in patch notes.
The Overwatch 2 x G.I. Joe crossover event was short, sharp, and well-themed. You had your chance to grab skins like Snake Eyes Genji or Baroness Widowmaker, or just stack up some extra Battle Pass XP through free challenges. No weird grind, no paywall confusion, just a good mix of nostalgia and utility.
Now that it’s over, I’m hoping Blizzard keeps doing crossovers this well. They don’t all have to be G.I. Joe, but a focused, stylish drop with smart unlock options? Yeah, I’ll take more of that. If you missed it, keep your eyes on the Hero Gallery. Some of these skins could return down the line. But for now, the battle’s over.