Overwatch to Download Archives

Overwatch to Download Archives

Overwatch to Download Archives

Overwatch to Download Archives

Overwatch Archives event LIVE with PS4 and Xbox One patch notes

Overwatch update news (Image: BLIZZARD)

Blizzard has brought back the full roster of Overwatch Archive missions from the past few years.

The new event went live today without much fanfare, with the development team confirming the news on social media.

The launch of these past events means that Overwatch fans won’t be getting a new one today but they will be able to experience them on different difficulty levels.

“Experience story-driven co-op missions from pivotal moments in Overwatch history,” a message from Blizzard explains.

“While the event is active, earn Archives Loot Boxes containing skins, highlight intros, emotes, and sprays inspired by moments from Overwatch’s past.

“And, new this year, demonstrate your tactical finesse with weekly Challenge Missions. Challenge Missions allow you to play Uprising, Retribution, and Storm Rising with new gameplay twists.”

As mentioned above, gamers can look forward to the Uprising, Retribution, and Storm Rising missions on PC, PS4 and Xbox One.

Features of this new Overwatch Archives event include:

  1. EPIC STORY MISSIONS - Assemble your strike team and relive missions from Overwatch’s past.
  2. CHALLENGE MISSIONS - Archives missions are back—and deadlier than before. Each week brings new modifiers to old missions, adding an increased level of difficulty to your favorite co-op experiences.
  3. UNLOCK SKINS & MORE - Earn Archives Loot Boxes containing skins, sprays, and more inspired by moments from Overwatch’s past, and complete weekly challenges to earn rewards.
  • Overwatch Uprising - Week 1, evade deadly lava discharged by felled enemies and survive the omnic incursion of King’s Row with limited health and exponential damage.
  • Overwatch Retribution - Week 2, hone your headshot skills with critical strikes and get up close and personal with your enemies. (Regional times may vary.)
  • Overwatch Storm Rising - Week 3, become your own vampiric support by dealing damage and take down enemies enraged by the deaths of their comrades. (Regional times may vary.)

Blizzard has also confirmed that this latest event has been released alongside a new Overwatch update, with patch notes listed below:

OVERWATCH PATCH NOTES

GENERAL UPDATES

New Feature: Share Replays

Players can now share their in-game replays with others!

A replay is shared via an alphanumeric code typically 6 characters long. The code can be shared however you want: in game, on forums, over social media. Another player can input that code and watch your replay. Codes are valid until the next patch.

The replay system has also received several improvements:

  • Pin up to 10 replays to keep until the next patch. Unpin a replay to make room for a different replay
  • The 10 most recently imported replay codes are tracked. This allows you to watch the same imported replay again without retyping the code
  • There is a new note field for each replay entry, allowing you to add descriptions or notes for yourself

 

General Updates

  • In game friend requests will now only display in game once per session
  • RealID friend requests will only show RealID names in game if you have recently played with that player
  • The initial Assemble Heroes timer for games using the Assault, Hybrid, Control, and Payload game modes has been further reduced from 35 to 30 seconds
  • In the Assault, Payload, and Hybrid game modes for Competitive Play, when both teams complete a round of offense and have more than 2 minutes of time bank then each team’s time bank is equally reduced until one of the teams has a 2 minutes remaining
    • Example: If Team A completes a round of offense on Volskaya with 4:37 remaining in their time bank, and Team B completes their round on offense with 2:50 remaining, then 50 seconds is removed from each team’s timebank. This leaves the teams tied 2-2 and Team A with 3:47 remaining and Team B with 2:00 remaining

 

COMPETITIVE UPDATES

  • Season 3 of Competitive 6v6 Lockout Elimination has begun!

 

HERO UPDATES

Baptiste

Exo Boots

  • Charge time reduced from 1 to 0.7 seconds

Regenerative Burst

  • Cooldown lowered from 15 to 13 seconds

 

D.Va

Boosters

  • Cooldown increased from 3 to 4 seconds

 

Mei

Ice Wall

  • Cooldown increased from 10 to 13 seconds
  • Player collision now allows large heroes to fit through 1 pillar gaps

 

Orisa

Fusion Driver (Primary Fire)

  • Damage increased from 10 to 11

 

Sigma

Gravitic Flux

  • Ultimate cost reduced 10%
  • Flight speed increased 30%

 

Soldier: 76

Helix Rockets

  • Cooldown reduced from 8 to 6 seconds

 

Sombra

Machine Pistol (Primary Fire)

 

BUG FIXES

General

  • Fixed a bug that could cause the "New" tag to remain on the "Player Icon" menu tab even after viewing the new icon(s)
  • Fixed a UI bug that could cause both teams to show 100% at the end of a Control Point map
  • Fixed a bug that could cause friend request "toasts" to be permanently displayed on screen when getting more than one request at a time
  • Fixed a bug that could cause several heroes' ultimate sounds to be silent when observing in third-person
  • Fixed an issue preventing replays from recording in Custom Games that start immediately
  • Fixed a bug that caused hero portraits in the Hero Select screen to appear blurry / low resolution
  • Fixed a bug where Slept or Knocked Down heroes could not be walked over by enemies

Maps

Numbani

  • Fixed a bug that allowed players to stand in an unintended location near the final checkpoint

Heroes

Bastion

  • Brick Skin: Fixed a bug that caused Bastion's brick bullets to grow in size after shooting through a Mei Icewall

Orisa

  • Fixed an issue where Orisa's supercharger placed on Petra's breakable floors was not properly being destroyed along with the floor

Reinhardt

  • Fixed a bug that resulted in assisted or environment kills not being counted in Reinhardt's Charge Kills stat, if the killed player was first knocked back by Reinhardt's charge

Sigma

  • Fixed a bug where Sigma's Gravitic Flux animation would play even if he was slept or stunned

Sombra

  • Fixed a bug where Sombra's translocator placed on Petra's breakable floors was not properly being destroyed along with the floor

Zarya

  • Fixed a bug where Zarya's Projected Barriers could prevent mutual knockdowns from happening between charging heroes

Workshop

  • Fixed an issue causing Player Joined Message to trigger multiple times when a player joined the match
  • Fixed an issue preventing Set Team Score/Modify Team Score from working in Assault, Hybrid, and Payload
  • Fixed an issue causing the editor to eat the last character of a unicode string when pasting in text
  • Fixed an issue preventing "Is Firing Primary" from returning true when Doomfist shoots his last bullet
  • Fixed an issue causing "Disallow Button" to fail to disable Reaper's Shadow Step
  • Renamed "Spectators" to "Non-Team Spectators" in Create HUD Text and Create In-World Text for clarity
  • Fixed an issue preventing the Non-Team Spectators option from working properly in Create HUD Text and Create In-World Text
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Overwatch seasonal events

Overwatch is an online team-based first person shooter developed by Blizzard Entertainment, and released worldwide in May 2016. Normally played in matches of six-vs-six, players select from one of over 30 heroes, broadly classified into the three roles of Tank, Damage, and Support, and work with their team to attack or defend map objectives. Each hero has a unique set of weapons, abilities, and skills, which players use to coordinate with their team to overpower the other. Overwatch supports both casual and ranked matchmaking, as well as a rotating set of arcade modes, and the game has since become a popular esport, featuring the Overwatch League that started in 2018. The game has been both a critical and financial success for Blizzard, exceeding over 30 million players and obtaining over US$1 billion in revenue within its first year.

To support ongoing interest in the game, Blizzard has run several seasonal events, typically coinciding with worldwide events and holidays. These events last for two to three weeks, updating levels to incorporate elements of that theme, and provide new game modes along with the opportunity to buy items with credits or acquire them through the game's loot box system. Players keep their earned character cosmetic options after the event ends, but the rest of the themed elements return to normal.

Overview[edit]

Over the course of developing Overwatch, Blizzard opted against using a downloadable content model to extend the game and bring post-sale revenues, as they had developed the game around the mechanic of allowing players to switch out to new heroes during the course of a match as to meet current strategic conditions; by requiring players to purchase new heroes, such a model would have hampered this approach.[1] Instead, they opted to include microtransactions through which players can buy loot boxes, which contain four randomized cosmetic items, including characters skins, victory poses, emotes, spray tags, highlight introductions, and player icons. This allowed them to create an incentivized level progression system that would reward players with a loot box for every level they earned from experience gained in playing matches.[2] Working alongside this, players can earn in-game coins through some loot box rewards or as a consolation prize for receiving a duplicate loot box reward. These coins can be used to purchase any of the available cosmetic items (with the exception of player icons), the cost reflecting the rarity of obtaining the item through a loot box.

Beginning in August 2016, Blizzard began introducing seasonal events, starting with the Summer Games event which corresponded with the 2016 Summer Olympics. Overwatch's director Jeff Kaplan said the goal of these seasonal events was to make the game "feel alive", correlating with real-world events.[3] The company has a history of creating in-game seasonal events, such as the Valentine's Day and New Year's events in World of Warcraft. Other competitor games, such as Destiny, League of Legends and Team Fortress 2, also implement in-game seasonal events.[4]

Events have generally included at least one new game mode, which typically is only available to play while that event is active; one exception is the "Capture the Flag" mode introduced during the Chinese New Year event in early 2017, which has been brought back to the game as a permanent feature in the game's casual Arcade matchmaking mode. Players are typically rewarded with loot boxes for playing matches in these seasonal game modes, and the game offers unique achievements and associated cosmetic rewards for completing certain goals within them.[5]

In addition to new games modes, these seasonal events include unique cosmetic items that can be obtained primarily during the event. Blizzard develops a large amount of content for these events, not all which ends up available to players.[6] Initially, these items could only be obtained through event-themed loot boxes that are guaranteed to contain at least one event-themed item, which could either be earned through leveling up, completing the event game modes, or through microtransactions;[7][8] however, in response to player feedback and avoid an apparent paywall access to these items, Blizzard allowed players to purchase these items with in-game currency at a higher cost than a non-event item of the same rarity, starting from the second seasonal event onward.[9][10] When the event is completed, the themed loot boxes and cosmetic items are no longer are available until the event is run again. However, players retain and can use all unique event items they have earned after the event.[7] Not all event items will be limited in this manner, as Blizzard plans to have certain event items be possible loot obtained from a regular loot box in the future.[11]

Several seasonal events, such as Summer Games, Halloween Terror, and Winter Wonderland, have recurred. However, on bringing these events back, the development team has added new changes to the event to keep them fresh and to reflect any new heroes or other content added to the game since the previous event's occurrence; for example, the 2017 Halloween "Junkenstein's Revenge" included a new endless mode and support for some of the newer heroes.[12] Recurring events also feature new themed cosmetic items for these recurring events, along with the return of the previous cosmetics which can be found in the event loot boxes or bought for a reduced coin amount.[13] Not all seasonal events are designed for recurrence, such as the lore-heavy "Uprising" event which took place in April 2017. Kaplan said that Blizzard has plans as to how these events will evolve in the future.[14]

Event types[edit]

Chinese New Year[edit]

To correlate to the real-world Chinese New Year, the Overwatch event is held around the same time (typically from late January to early February), and named following the Chinese Zodiac; for example the first such event occurring in 2017 was named the "Year of the Rooster". Cosmetics in these events have followed the themes from Chinese legends. The event introduced the first Capture the Flag mode for Overwatch called "Capture the Rooster"; Blizzard had looked at adding such a mode for a few years during Overwatch's development but had difficulty with the mechanics due to the vastly different set of abilities offered by the characters that could imbalance the mode towards fast-moving characters.[15] Played on the Lijiang Tower map, normally used for Control modes, each team has a flag near their base. To capture the other opponent's flag, a character must stay near the flag and not take damage for a few seconds. Once they have taken the flag, they then must return it to their team's base, scoring a point if they do so. If they die while bringing the flag back, either a teammate can try to capture it, or the opposing team must stay near the flag, avoiding taking damage for a few seconds, to return it to their base. Teams can score with the opposing team's flag even if their team's flag has been taken. The first team to three scores, or the team with the highest score after five minutes, wins the match.[16]

Following the event, Blizzard introduced a more general Capture the Flag mode, playable on any of the Control maps, into the Arcade modes as well as making it an option for custom games with several adjustable parameters.[17]

Overwatch Archives[edit]

The Overwatch Archive events are typically held in April of the year, and feature story-driver cooperative player versus environment Archive modes that Blizzard has used to explore the history of the characters and narrative.[18] According to Kaplan, the Archive modes were something Blizzard felt had been asked for by players since they started offering the seasonal events. Players had requested non-holiday-themed events, as well as sought more details on the setting and history of the Overwatch world.[19] In addition, these events add additional cosmetic items based on the uniforms and backstory of the original Overwatch forces.[20] A digital comics tied to the narrative of the mode have been released alongside the event.[19]

In the normal Archive events, players select from four pre-selected characters, and then fight as directed by in-game narration to attack or defend points from enemy forces. If a player was downed, any of the other still-surviving players could help them up by interacting with that character for a few moments. If all four players are downed, or the explosive is destroyed before reaching the sealed doors, the round ends as a loss.[20][21] A separate mode allowed players to complete the same mission without being limited in character selection, but without any of the character-specific dialogue; Blizzard added this based on feedback from Junkenstein's Revenge, so as to provide a less restrictive way to enjoy the game mode.[22] For the first three years of the Archives event, Blizzard added a new mission, while in the fourth year, they added special variants of these missions that altered the conditions of the match, such as where each heroes' health is halved but they deal twice as much damage.[23]

The Archive mode was considered a much-improved version of a player-versus-environment mode compared to Junkenstein's Revenge from the Halloween event. Cecilia D'Anastasio for Kotaku felt the mode was much more dynamic since it required players to move throughout the map rather than stay in one general location, and as the four default characters represent a balanced team, the mode calls for more careful teamwork and strategy. D'Anastasio also felt that with new voice lines to support this mode, it helped to establish the game's lore for players.[24]PC Gamer argued that the Uprising event demonstrated the potential for a strong team-based story-driven campaign developed within the Overwatch narrative.[25] Elements of these Archive missions were used as the basis to develop the cooperative side of the upcoming Overwatch 2.

Anniversary[edit]

Corresponding to the game's release in May of each, the Anniversary event features several new cosmetics for many characters. It also makes all special cosmetics that are normally locked except during the special events available for purchase with in-game coins and possible to obtain through loot boxes.[26][27] Nearly all special game modes from all events are made playable as well. The Anniversary mode has been used to introduce major new features to the game following testing on the Public Test Region. The first Anniversary event added three new Arena maps used for the smaller-scale Elimination games, and which remained in rotation after the events' conclusion, as well as adding new Elimination game modes.[28] "The Workshop", a script-based system for users to create their own games, launched alongside the 3rd Anniversary event, with several of the more successful user game modes brought into the Arcade for all to play.[29]

Summer Games[edit]

Overwatch's "Summer Games" event were first run concurrent to the 2016 Summer Olympics and since ran annually.[7] The events are generally themed around summer sports and activities. During this event, a special game mode called Lúcioball is available. Lúcioball was designed as a futuristic soccer game in which two teams of three Lúcio characters attempt to push a ball into their opponents' goal. Played in four-minute matches on the special stadium map, Estádio das Rãs, players use two kinds of attacks to control the ball's movements: primarily, a melee attack and a secondary, powerful sonic boom that could knock back opponents as well (frequently called "booping" by players). Players can also use the level's environmental perks (e.g., jump pads and speed-boosting walls) to secure strategic advantage on the field.[7]PC Gamer felt that the mode felt closer to a "multiplayer carnival game than a fleshed-out, standalone mode".[30]

Halloween Terror[edit]

The Halloween Terror events fall around the end of October to celebrate Halloween. Most new cosmetics added are based on classic monster and horror tropes. During Halloween Terror, the "Junkenstein's Revenge" cooperative game mode against computer players is available. In Junkenstein's Revenge, four players cooperatively guard a castle door from oncoming waves of enemies and bosses. Set in a themed section of the game's Eichenwalde map, players select a difficulty level and choose between the characters Ana, Hanzo, McCree, and Soldier: 76, before fighting off approaching mindless "zomnic" drones, long-range "zombardiers," exploding tires, and costumed versions of the characters Reaper, Roadhog, Symmetra, Mercy, and Junkrat (as the titular Dr. Junkenstein).[30] The game mode includes new voice work and is based on a companion comic book released concurrently.[30] Later iterations have added other heroes that can be selected, as well as a secondary mode where any hero can be selected.

The new mode was generally praised by commentators. PC Gamer wrote that the event resembled a similar event run on the team shooter Team Fortress 2 since 2012. Though the reviewer found the Junkenstein mode pleasant, he wrote that in comparison to Team Fortress 2'sMann vs. Machine mode, Junkenstein felt "shallow" and similar to Lúcioball in its simplistic map flow, giving little room for player movement. He also wondered why the mode was limited to four specific characters.[30]Eurogamer's Robert Purchase found the event fun and considered it a good distraction from Overwatch's main modes, but also recognized that if it was kept on after the Halloween Terror event, it would become a stale game mode.[31] Heather Alexandra for Kotaku felt that the mode demonstrated that a co-operative player-versus-environment mode would fit well as a permanent feature within Overwatch as it required good team coordination to complete more challenging matches.[32]

Winter Wonderland[edit]

The Winter Wonderland events typically run late in the calendar year into the new year timed with winter in the Northern Hemisphere. Its cosmetics tend to feature both winter-themed cosmetics as well as those related to Christmas and other similar holiday events.

Two event mods have been added during Winter Wonderland. The first is a deathmatch mode called "Mei's Snowball Offensive". The mode takes place on the smaller Ecopoint: Antartica map, introduced in the previous months for standard deathmatch play. Six players each play Mei, but where her Endothermic Blaster, which normally fires a stream of damaging cold, can only fire a single snowball. Players must find a snowball pile scattered around the map to reload the weapon. Further, her Ultimate ability allows her to fire a machine-gun-like string of snowballs for a brief period. Otherwise, Mei's other abilities (Ice Wall and Cyro-Freeze) remain the same. A single snowball hit kills the struck until the round is complete.[33] Kotaku claims this mode was generally not well received by players as the act of having to reload the Blaster made one too vulnerable, and with the permadeath mechanic in play, the mode was not fun nor captured the spirit of a snowball fight.[34]

The second new mode is "Yeti Hunter", an asymmetric mode where five players, each playing as Mei, attempt to defeat one player controlling Winston (acting as the Yeti) in a boss battle on Nepal's Village stage. Yeti Hunt is the first Overwatch mode to use role selection; players can indicate their preference to play as a Mei or as the Yeti. The Winston player must elude the Mei team, which can freeze him, use ice walls to impede his movement, or catch him in a snare trap (which replaces Mei's usual Ultimate). After collecting four pieces of meat, which spawn randomly in predetermined locations around the map, Winston unleashes his Ultimate ability for a short period which temporarily boosts his health, reduces his jump cooldown, and gives him powerful melee attacks. When a Mei player dies, they will respawn after a short delay and cost their team a life. The match is over once the Mei team either defeats Winston or loses all five of their lives.[35] Kaplan described the Yeti Hunt as a light-hearted mode to be played for a few matches rather than hundreds of hours.[14]

Special challenges[edit]

Character-specific challenges are not run on a regular schedule but generally are released alongside new narrative pieces of lore for that character. They feature new cosmetic items that a player can earn either through playing and winning matches in game and/or through watching Overwatch players on streaming media during the set period.[36]

Event history[edit]

Event Name Start date End date Notes Ref
Summer Games 2016 August 2, 2016August 22, 2016Introduced Lúcioball [7]
Halloween Terror 2016 October 11, 2016November 1, 2016Introduced Junkenstein's Revenge [37]
Winter Wonderland 2016 December 13, 2016January 2, 2017Introduced Mei's Snowball Offensive [33]
Year of the Rooster January 24, 2017February 13, 2017Introduced Capture the Flag [38]
Overwatch Archive: Uprising April 11, 2017May 1, 2017Introduced the "Uprising" Archive mission [19]
Anniversary 2017 May 23, 2017June 12, 2017Introduced new Arena maps and two Elimination modes [28]
Summer Games 2017 August 8, 2017August 29, 2017Added additional maps for Lúcioball and introduced ranked play for Lúcioball [39]
Halloween Terror 2017 October 10, 2017November 2, 2017Added four characters for scored Jukenstein's Revenge and online scoreboards [40]
Winter Wonderland 2017 December 12, 2017January 1, 2018Introduced Yeti Hunter [35]
Year of the Dog February 8, 2018March 5, 2018Modified Capture the Flag rules, and introduced ranked play for Capture the Flag. [41][42]
Overwatch Archive: Retribution April 10, 2018May 3, 2018Introduced the "Retribution" Archive mission [43]
Anniversary 2018 May 22, 2018June 11, 2018Introduced ranked play for deathmatch[26][27]
Summer Games 2018 August 9, 2018August 30, 2018Added new map for Lúcioball [44]
Halloween Terror 2018 October 10, 2018October 31, 2018Added two characters for scored Jukenstein's Revenge [45]
Winter Wonderland 2018 December 11, 2018January 2, 2019[46]
Ana's Bastet Challenge January 8, 2019February 21, 2019First character-based challenge [36]
Year of the Pig January 24, 2019February 18, 2019[47]
Overwatch Archive: Storm Rising April 16, 2019May 6, 2019Introduced the "Storm Rising" Archive mission [48]
Anniversary 2019 May 21, 2019June 10, 2019Introduced "The Workshop" to the game [49][29]
Baptiste's Reunion Challenge June 19, 2019July 1, 2019[50][51]
Summer Games 2019 July 16, 2019August 5, 2019[52]
Bastion's Brick Challenge August 17, 2019August 30, 2019Collaboration with The Lego Group[53]
Halloween Terror 2019 October 15, 2019November 4, 2019[54]
Mercy's Recall Challenge November 12, 2019December 2, 2019[55][56]
Winter Wonderland 2019 December 10, 2019January 2, 2020[57]
Ashe's Mardi Gras Challenge February 25, 2020March 9, 2020[58]
Overwatch Archives March 12, 2020April 2, 2020Added variants to the past Archive missions. [23]
Anniversary 2020 May 19, 2020June 9, 2020[59]
Sigma's Maestro Challenge July 14, 2020July 27, 2020Introduced alongside the release of Overwatch: Cities & Countries, a music playlist available on several digital and music streaming services. [60]
Summer Games 2020 August 4, 2020August 26, 2020[61]
Tracer's Comic Challenge September 15, 2020September 28, 2020[62]

References[edit]

  1. ^Orland, Kyle (May 25, 2016). ""When it's done": How Blizzard dragged Overwatch across the launch threshold". Ars Technica. Archived from the original on June 4, 2016. Retrieved June 6, 2016.
  2. ^Barlett, Ben (February 17, 2016). "Overwatch progression with Jeff Kaplan: "There is no such thing as a random loot system, not at Blizzard"". PCGamesN. Retrieved May 18, 2017.
  3. ^Hillier, Brenna (August 3, 2016). "Overwatch Summer Games items are supposed to be rare enough that some of you miss out on them". VG247. Retrieved May 18, 2017.
  4. ^Porter, Matt (August 3, 2016). "After Summer Games, Overwatch Has More Seasonal Events on the Way". IGN. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  5. ^"How to unlock all the new 'Overwatch' sprays during the Uprising event". Retrieved December 19, 2017.
  6. ^Williams, Mike (December 22, 2016). "Blizzard on Overwatch 2017: We "Work on More Content Than We Release"". US Gamer. Retrieved December 12, 2017.
  7. ^ abcdeDornbrush, Jonathan (August 2, 2016). "Overwatch Summer Games Seasonal Event, New Brawl Released". IGN. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  8. ^Frank, Allegra (August 2, 2016). "Overwatch celebrates the Summer Olympics with limited time loot boxes". Polygon. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  9. ^Marks, Tom (October 11, 2016). "Here are all of Overwatch's new Halloween Terror skins". PC Gamer. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  10. ^Duggan, James (August 19, 2016). "Why Overwatch's Summer Games are a Problem". IGN. Retrieved May 18, 2017.
  11. ^Grayson, Nathan (November 3, 2017). "Blizzard Adding More Special Skins To Regular Overwatch Loot Boxes". Kotaku. Retrieved November 5, 2017.
  12. ^Bailey, Dustin (November 5, 2017). "Overwatch will keep bringing back seasonal events, but they'll see changes". PCGamesN. Retrieved November 5, 2017.
  13. ^McWhertor, Michael (August 1, 2017). "Overwatch's Summer Games event returns Aug. 8". Polygon. Retrieved August 3, 2017.
  14. ^ abScott-Jones, Richard (December 13, 2017). "Jeff Kaplan tells us why Overwatch's loot boxes work and how Blizzard World was made". PCGamesN. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  15. ^Frank, Allegra (January 24, 2017). "Overwatch's capture the flag mode took years to figure out, but it may be here to stay". Polygon. Archived from the original on January 25, 2017. Retrieved January 24, 2017.
  16. ^McWhertor, Michael (January 24, 2017). "Overwatch's Chinese New Year event is live". Polygon. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  17. ^McWhertor, Michael (February 7, 2017). "Overwatch's capture the flag mode is here to stay". Polygon. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  18. ^Gilliam, Ryan (April 2, 2018). "Overwatch's Uprising event returns as Overwatch Archives". Polygon. Retrieved April 2, 2018.
  19. ^ abcHillier, Brenna (April 12, 2017). "Overwatch Uprising: Kaplan explains what, why, how you made it happen and what's in it for you". VG247. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  20. ^ abMcWhertor, Michael (April 11, 2017). "Overwatch's newest event, Uprising, goes live". Polygon. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  21. ^Moore, Bo (April 12, 2017). "Overwatch Uprising guide: tips for the game's new PvE mode". PC Gamer. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  22. ^Grayson, Nathan (April 11, 2017). "Overwatch's 'Uprising' Event Adds New Co-Op Brawl, 100 New Items". Kotaku. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  23. ^ abReiner, Andrew (March 12, 2020). "Overwatch's Archives Event Returns With New Skins". Game Informer. Retrieved March 12, 2020.
  24. ^D'Anastasio, Cecilia (April 12, 2017). "Overwatch's New PvE Mode Is Terrific". Kotaku. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  25. ^Moore, Bo; Marks, Tom (April 29, 2017). "Uprising is the best case for an Overwatch campaign yet". PC Gamer. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  26. ^ abMarshall, Cass (May 15, 2018). "Overwatch's second anniversary event starts May 22". Heroes Never Die. Retrieved May 15, 2018.
  27. ^ abFaller, Patrick (May 24, 2018). "New Overwatch Skins And More Out Now With Anniversary Event". GameSpot. Retrieved May 24, 2018.
  28. ^ abBratt, Chris (May 23, 2017). "Overwatch celebrates first anniversary with skins, dances and three new arena maps". Eurogamer. Retrieved May 23, 2017.
  29. ^ abMcWhertor, Michael (May 21, 2019). "Overwatch Anniversary 2019 event goes live, here are all the skins". Polygon. Retrieved May 21, 2019.
  30. ^ abcdLahti, Evan (October 11, 2016). "There's not much to Overwatch's new horde mode, but it's still fun". PC Gamer. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  31. ^Purchase, Robert (October 12, 2016). "Why I'm glad Overwatch's fun new horde mode is just for Halloween". Eurogamer. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  32. ^Alexandra, Heather (October 11, 2016). "Blizzard Should Make Overwatch's Excellent New Brawl Permanent". Kotaku. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  33. ^ abMcWhertor, Michael (December 13, 2016). "Overwatch's holiday update arrives with new loot, new game mode". Polygon. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  34. ^"Overwatch's Holiday Brawl Is A Bit Of A Letdown". Kotaku. December 14, 2016. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  35. ^ abGrayson, Nathan (December 7, 2017). "Overwatch Gets Yeti Boss Fight". Kotaku. Retrieved December 7, 2017.
  36. ^ abVincent, Brittney (January 8, 2019). "'Overwatch' Introduces 'Ana's Bastet Challenge' Event". Variety. Retrieved June 19, 2019.
  37. ^Chalk, Andy (October 11, 2016). "The Overwatch "Halloween Terror" event is live now". PC Gamer. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  38. ^McWhertor, Michael (January 18, 2017). "Overwatch will celebrate Chinese New Year for its next seasonal event". Polygon. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  39. ^Nunneley, Stephany (August 8, 2017). "Overwatch Summer Games 2017 event has kicked off – here's a look at the skins and everything else". VG247. Retrieved August 8, 2017.
  40. ^Nunneley, Stephany (October 10, 2017). "Overwatch Halloween Terror event is live, adds new endless mode for Junkenstein's Revenge". VG247. Retrieved December 7, 2017.
  41. ^Devore, Jordan (February 6, 2018). "This week's Year of the Dog event in Overwatch will bring a new map". Destructoid. Retrieved February 6, 2018.
  42. ^Hester, Blake (February 9, 2018). "'Overwatch' Celebrates Lunar New Year With New Map and Capture The Flag Mode". Glixel. Retrieved February 9, 2018.
  43. ^Makuch, Eddie (May 1, 2018). "Overwatch's New Map, Rialto, Is Launching This Week For Everyone". GameSpot. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  44. ^Marshall, Cass (August 2, 2018). "Overwatch's Summer Games return August 9th". Heroes Never Die. Retrieved August 2, 2018.
  45. ^
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