11 Important Changes Coming To Overwatch 2 To Finally Get It Back On Track
Blizzard is bringing some of the most substantial changes to Overwatch 2 that the game has seen since it launched in 2022. In a 30-minute-long Spotlight presentation, the company revealed several changes and new modes, as well as a new hero coming to the hero shooter in 2025. You can watch the full presentation below, or if you just want the highlights, read on.
The most important change coming to Overwatch 2 in 2025 is the addition of Perks. This system essentially turns the shooter into a MOBA, allowing you to upgrade your hero throughout a match and fundamentally change their ability sets to cater to your playstyle. This feels like the revival of the planned skill trees that would have given heroes different abilities that riffed on their base ones in a PvE mode that was canceled in 2023.
One example shown was Orisa, who can add a placeable shield similar to the one she had in the original Overwatch to her kit, allowing her to defend herself and allies with a more stationary playstyle. Also shown was the option to upgrade Ana to be able to use her damage-reducing Nano Boost ultimate on herself, giving her a power boost and a degree of survivability she otherwise doesn't have. This is the biggest fundamental change Overwatch 2 has introduced to its gameplay since the game launched. It'll be implemented in quickplay and competitive modes in Season 15, beginning on February 18. We'll have impressions on the site very soon.
Blizzard is adding new rewards to its Competitive mode, including a purple Galactic skin for weapons, and weapon charms that show off your rank. Also coming to Competitive are hero bans in Season 16. Each team will be able to vote for two heroes each match, with the ban applying to both teams. In a future season, you'll also be able to vote between different maps before a match, but that will be coming sometime after hero bans.
After years of backlash over Blizzard getting rid of Loot Boxes in favor of expensive cosmetics, Overwatch 2 is bringing them back in Season 15 to give you a random chance to unlock skins and other goodies. These will be found in weekly rewards and the free battle pass track, and the game will note the odds for different cosmetics before you open them.
After recently testing a return to Overwatch's original 6v6 format, Blizzard is giving it a separate competitive queue in Season 15. This will be an open queue but will have a limit of two tanks per team.
In a bold move, Overwatch 2 is adding a new iteration of its nostalgia-driven Overwatch Classic mode that reverts the game to different points in its nearly nine-year lifespan. The next version will spotlight one of the most controversial metas: GOATS. This three tanks/three supports meta was prominent in 2019 and widely considered one of the lowest-interest compositions to watch and play. Some theorize the reason Blizzard introduced Role Queue was to ensure competitive players can't run the composition. If you're feeling nostalgic, the GOATS Overwatch Classic will be available in Season 15.
One of the big headliners of the presentation was Freja. She's a new damage hero who was a member of the original Overwatch before it was disbanded. Blizzard describes her as a high-skill-ceiling hero due to the precision required to master her kit. She uses a crossbow, is able to leap up high and slow down time with her alternate fire, and has an ultimate that can drag enemies to a central point to rain down damage on them. Freja will join the roster in Season 16.
While we didn't see the hero following Freja in motion, Blizzard did show concept art of a new character codenamed 'Aqua.' This guy is a Chinese 'water wielder' who has 'one of the most unique ability sets' in the game. He'll join the roster in Season 18.
Stadium is a new mode coming to Overwatch 2 that includes Mods, a new mechanic that lets you make incremental upgrades to stats and abilities to create your own build for your character. You'll build one hero throughout a lengthy match that rapidly swaps between different maps and modes as a best-of-seven game. At the beginning of each round, players are given access to an armory and can spend earned points from the previous round to upgrade their character's traits and abilities. Some examples given include Reaper being able to fly while in Wraith Form, Soldier: 76's healing station gaining increased range and delivering a power boost to those in its radius, and Kiriko being able to teleport across the map without having to target an ally to do so. Blizzard describes Stadium as the ultimate 'fantasy' of each hero, cranking their ability sets to an absurd level of destruction and chaos.
Another notable aspect of Stadium is that it's all in third person. Blizzard says this is to help avoid screen clutter, which is only made worse as abilities become upgraded throughout the match. Stadium will launch with 14 heroes, with the rest of the cast added over time. We'll have impressions of the mode on the site soon.
Blizzard ran down the handful of customizable Mythic skins coming over the course of the next three seasons. In the Spotlight presentation, we see the Zenyatta skin based on the mythological Chinese creature called the Pixiu in-game; that one's coming in Season 15. In the following season, Juno will get the Mythic skin as part of a magical girl theme called DokiWatch. Come season 17, D.Va will get a Mythic skin based on the Siberian tiger. Additionally, Widomaker, Mercy, and Reaper will each get a Mythic weapon over the next three seasons.
K-Pop group Le Sserafim is returning to the Overwatch 2 world. The girl group already collaborated with Overwatch back in 2023 with a limited-time event that included skins, an arcade mode, and a music video featuring Tracer, Sombra, Brigitte, Kiriko, and D.Va. Le Sserafim revealed that new skins based on the group's aesthetic will come in Season 15.
After a rundown of new Esports formats in the Overwatch Champions Series, game director Aaron Keller threw out a few rapid-fire updates, including announcing map reworks for Ciravasa and New Junk City, as well as more 'classic' map reworks. Also coming after Season 19 is a new map based on the Atlantic Archology lab, and one set in Tokyo.We were able to get hands-on time with both Perks and the new Stadium mode. Be on the lookout for written thoughts on those very soon.
For the latest news, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


San Francisco Chronicle
2 days ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
The Brad Blizzard: Panthers star's love for desserts reaches a new level
For one day only: The Brad Blizzard, available at Dairy Queen. The snack story of the Stanley Cup playoffs — did Brad Marchand eat a Blizzard between periods of a playoff game or not? — reached its celebratory peak Friday. A Dairy Queen in Sunrise, Florida, where the Panthers play their home games, renamed the treat for the day in honor of the now two-time Stanley Cup winner. The Brad Blizzard was one of his favorites: the chocolate chip cookie dough flavor, though on Friday, the primary ingredient wasn't called chocolate chips but rather chocolate 'chirps' — a nod to the verbal jabs that hockey players give one another on the ice. 'I love seeing the excitement from everyone,' Marchand said while 'working' at the DQ for a little while, actually making the treats and handing them out to customers both inside the store and at the drive-thru window. 'These are moments that you love to appreciate.' Marchand was not having a Blizzard between periods of that game in the Eastern Conference final against Carolina — it was honey, but cameras captured Marchand enjoying something off a spoon and the story just took off from there — but Blizzardmania was born. Marchand and several of his teammates went to DQ on off days for the treats, including on the night before ending the Stanley Cup Final against Edmonton in Game 6. Marchand said they went before Game 6 for good luck. The Panthers won 5-1 a day later to take the Cup. 'It's incredible the moments that you look back on and at the time you don't really appreciate what they could mean at the end of the day,' Marchand told reporters Friday. 'The first time we kind of went as a group to Dairy Queen, we were just going for a walk. We wanted to walk off our dinner and have Dairy Queen for dessert and it became this huge organic moment in the playoffs. ... Those are the things you look back on and you have fun with.' It has been a nonstop party for the Panthers since winning the Cup, with trips to the famed Elbo Room bar to interact with fans, a team dinner at a Miami restaurant on Thursday night — one where tennis great Martina Navratilova, who just happened to be having dinner in the same spot, got to sip from the Cup — and a slew of other appearances. Marchand had 10 goals and 10 assists in the playoff run for the Panthers, who won the Cup for the second straight season. He was acquired at the trade deadline by Florida general manager and hockey operations president Bill Zito from rival Boston, and the tale of how Marchand — who was far from a fan favorite in Florida before the trade — became beloved by Panthers fans was one of the compelling stories of the postseason. Marchand and the Panthers will have their championship parade on Fort Lauderdale Beach on Sunday, and then free agency starts July 1. Marchand is a free agent, though he has indicated a willingness to remain in Florida and had a message for the Panthers during his DQ shift. 'Give me a contract,' he said.


Hamilton Spectator
2 days ago
- Hamilton Spectator
The Brad Blizzard: Panthers star's love for desserts reaches new level
For one day only: The Brad Blizzard, available at Dairy Queen. The snack story of the Stanley Cup playoffs — did Brad Marchand eat a Blizzard between periods of a playoff game or not? — reached its celebratory peak Friday. A Dairy Queen in Sunrise, Fla., where the Panthers play their home games, renamed the treat for the day in honour of the now two-time Stanley Cup winner. The Brad Blizzard was one of his favourites: the chocolate chip cookie dough flavour, though on Friday, the primary ingredient wasn't called chocolate chips but rather chocolate 'chirps' — a nod to the verbal jabs that hockey players give one another on the ice. 'I love seeing the excitement from everyone,' Marchand said while 'working' at the DQ for a little while, actually making the treats and handing them out to customers both inside the store and at the drive-thru window. 'These are moments that you love to appreciate.' Marchand was not having a Blizzard between periods of that game in the Eastern Conference final against Carolina — it was honey, but cameras captured Marchand enjoying something off a spoon and the story just took off from there — but Blizzardmania was born. Marchand and several of his teammates went to DQ on off days for the treats, including on the night before ending the Stanley Cup Final against Edmonton in Game 6. Marchand said they went before Game 6 for 'good luck.' The Panthers won 5-1 a day later to take the Cup. 'It's incredible the moments that you look back on and at the time you don't really appreciate what they could mean at the end of the day,' Marchand told reporters Friday. 'The first time we kind of went as a group to Dairy Queen, we were just going for a walk. We wanted to walk off our dinner and have Dairy Queen for dessert and it became this huge organic moment in the playoffs. … Those are the things you look back on and you have fun with.' It has been a non-stop party for the Panthers since winning the Cup, with trips to the famed Elbo Room bar to interact with fans, a team dinner at a Miami restaurant on Thursday night — one where tennis great Martina Navratilova, who just happened to be having dinner in the same spot, got to sip from the Cup — and a slew of other appearances. Marchand had 10 goals and 10 assists in the playoff run for the Panthers, who won the Cup for the second straight season. He was acquired at the trade deadline by Florida general manager and hockey operations president Bill Zito from rival Boston, and the tale of how Marchand — who was far from a fan favourite in Florida before the trade — became beloved by Panthers fans was one of the compelling stories of the post-season. Marchand and the Panthers will have their championship parade on Fort Lauderdale Beach on Sunday, and then free agency starts July 1. Marchand is a free agent, though he has indicated a willingness to remain in Florida and had a message for the Panthers during his DQ shift. 'Give me a contract,' he said. ___ AP NHL playoffs: and

Miami Herald
2 days ago
- Miami Herald
‘I feel like I'm home': Brad Marchand serves Panthers fans Dairy Queen after Cup win
Brad Marchand, barely 60 hours after winning the Stanley Cup for the second time in his 16-season NHL career, emerged from the kitchen of the Dairy Queen in Sunrise late Friday morning with a tray full of chocolate chip cookie dough Blizzards. 'Best day of my life,' Marchand said. Marchand credits the dessert chain for a lot of the Florida Panthers' postseason success after he and several teammates made a post-dinner trek there during the Eastern Conference final and began winning. So it was only natural that one of his post-Cup meet-and-greets with fans would be at a DQ, where hundreds of fans lined up on short notice to meet the veteran forward and get free ice cream hand delivered by him. For the day, at that location, the chocolate chip cookie dough Blizzard was called the 'Brad Blizzard' and instead of chocolate chips, it contained 'chocolate chirps.' 'It's been incredible the last couple days, but I think this tops it all off,' said Marchand, his voice hoarse from all the celebrating with his teammates since clinching the championship Tuesday night with a 5-1 win over the Edmonton Oilers in Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Final. 'It legit brings me back to my childhood, and it's been an incredible few days. So much love down here in Florida. There's always been a lot of talk about it not being a hockey city, but it's pretty evident that there's so much love down here for the game of hockey, and it's pretty incredible to be part of it.' It's something Marchand never expected would happen. Up until the Boston Bruins traded him to the Panthers in March for what became a first-round draft pick, he was a villain of sorts in South Florida. He was on the opposite end of a pair of bitter playoff series in 2023 and 2024, both of which Florida won. But since he got to Florida, he was accepted with open arms and was a major reason the Panthers repeated. He scored 10 goals, including six in the Cup Final series alone, and had 20 points throughout the postseason. 'It's been special,' Marchand said. 'From a fan base that was not very fond of me and I wasn't very fond of them, it's done a full 180. They completely embraced me and allowed me to be part of this team in the city and very appreciative for it.' His time in Florida might be up soon, though. He's slated to become a free agent on July 1. But by the way he talked on Friday and the way he has talked over his brief tenure here, Marchand doesn't sound like a guy who wants to leave any time soon. 'I feel like I'm home,' Marchand said as he was talking with fans. 'I am home, aren't I?' His message to Panthers president of hockey operations and general manager Bill Zito: 'Give me a contract!' If he does stay, there's a request to put a Dairy Queen in Amerant Bank Arena, as well. How the Dairy Queen tradition started It all began when a half dozen Panthers players — Marchand, fellow forwards Carter Verhaeghe and Eetu Luostarinen\ and defensemen Niko Mikkola, Uvis Balinskis and Jaycob Megna — going on a Dairy Queen run between Games 1 and 2 of the Eastern Conference final in Raleigh. A photo of a fan meeting the group went viral. 'We were just going for a walk,' Marchand said. 'We wanted to walk off our dinner. We got up Dairy Queen for dessert, and it became this huge organic moment throughout the playoffs.' The Panthers won that game against Carolina 5-2. They made four more trips throughout the playoffs — ahead of Game 5 against the Hurricanes as well as Games 2, 5 and 6 in the Stanley Cup Final against the Edmonton Oilers, with the size of the group increasing during the Cup Final. Florida went 5-0 in the games following Dairy Queen runs. The Panthers even made a T-shirt commemorating the DQ runs, depicting the original six from the first trip eating ice cream in their home red sweaters around a Stanley C. Panther-themed ice cream truck. Did Marchand also eat a Blizzard during a game? During Game 3 of the conference final against the Hurricanes, a Sportsnet camera caught Marchand eating something off a spoon during the second intermission. When asked postgame about his midgame treat and if it happened to be a Blizzard, Marchand smiled. 'You can't beat it,' Marchand said. 'It's the best dessert in the world.' Except... it's not what he was eating prior to the Panthers finishing off the eventual 6-2 win, one in which Florida scored five goals in the final frame. So what was on the spoon that cameras caught him with? 'Honey,' Marchand said. As for talking about Dairy Queen? 'I was kind of making a joke,' Marchand said. 'I think people took it seriously. The amount of messages I got about people going to Dairy Queen yesterday — I appreciate the support. I love a good Blizzard more than anybody, but it's not something I've had in the middle of a game ... yet.' As for the honey? There's a story behind that, too. 'I've always loved honey,' Marchand said. 'Actually, when I was growing up, I loved Winnie the Pooh. So I used to have a Winnie the Pooh bear and I would feed him honey. It was covered — covered — and rock hard. I've always enjoyed it.' Marchand living up Stanley Cup celebrations Marchand certainly has enjoyed himself the past few days as the Panthers celebrate their second consecutive Stanley Cup championship — and he enjoys the second of his career and first since 2011. He was one of the lives of the part at both the Elbo Room on Wednesday and at E11even on Thursday night. Prior to the trip to the Miami nightclub on Thursday, Marchand and the team dined at Maple & Ash. While there, Marchand uploaded 20 photos to his Instagram story thanking the various former teams of his current teammates, plus the former clubs of coach Paul Maurice and Zito, for allowing the Panthers team in its current form to come together. Teammates followed suit by thanking Boston for sending Marchand to Florida. 'We all have our own story ... but we all got here,' Marchand said. 'It all played a part in this team winning the Cup.'