Overwatch 2 Season 10's New Mythic Prisms Are A Huge Disappointment For Players
Overwatch 2 Season 10 introduces Mythic Prisms, but the sky-high cost for mythic skins sparks outrage and disappointment among players.
Hey everyone, it's your average Overwatch 2 enjoyer here, and I need to talk about the elephant in the room that is Season 10. The new season dropped, and while we got the hype of a new hero, Venture (the 40th, can you believe it?), and some cool events on the horizon like Mirrorwatch, there's this massive, glaring issue that's got the whole community in an uproar. Blizzard introduced a new currency called Mythic Prisms, supposedly to let us finally get those sweet, sweet mythic skins we missed from past seasons. Sounds great, right? Well, the excitement lasted about five seconds before we all saw the price tag. Spoiler alert: it's absolutely brutal. Let's just say my wallet started crying before I did.

So, what's the big deal? The core concept isn't terrible. A dedicated shop section for mythic items? Awesome! A way to acquire past cosmetics without waiting for a random re-release? Sign me up! The execution, however, is where everything falls apart. To get a single, fully-upgraded mythic skin, you need 80 of these new Mythic Prisms. And how do you get them? You buy them. With real money. And the conversion rate is... well, let's just look at the facts.
The Staggering Cost of Mythic Prisms:
| Bundle Size | Real-World Cost (USD) | What It Gets You |
|---|---|---|
| 10 Prisms | $9.99 | Basically nothing (can't buy a skin) |
| 50 Prisms | $39.99 | A partially upgraded skin, maybe? |
| 100 Prisms | $74.99 | One fully-upgraded mythic skin |
Let that sink in. Seventy-five dollars. For one skin. One! 😱 I don't know about you, but that's more than a full-price AAA game. The monetization strategy here feels incredibly aggressive, even for a free-to-play title. Many of us were hoping for a reasonable alternative to the battle pass grind, maybe using legacy credits or a more generous earnable system. Instead, we got what feels like a cash grab targeting collectors and completionists.
Now, to be fair, Blizzard did throw us a bone—a very small, very grindy bone. You can earn up to 80 Mythic Prisms... but only if you buy the Premium Battle Pass for 1,000 Overwatch Coins (which is about $10). So, the primary method for unlocking a mythic skin each season remains mostly unchanged: pay for the pass, grind it out. The new Prism shop just adds a ludicrously expensive shortcut for older cosmetics. It doesn't make past skins more accessible; it just adds a prohibitively costly option next to the existing one.
The Community's Reaction & The Bigger Picture
The disappointment in the community is palpable. For years, players have been asking for a way to obtain missed mythic skins. The anticipation for this feature was huge! But this implementation? It feels like a slap in the face. The value proposition is just not there. For the price of one mythic skin from the Prism shop, I could:
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Buy the next 7+ seasonal battle passes.
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Get several awesome game bundles during a sale.
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Just... save my money for something that doesn't make me feel exploited. 💸
It also creates a weird psychological pressure. "Do I really want that Cyber Demon Genji? It'll cost me $75..." It turns what should be fun cosmetic customization into a stressful financial decision.
Is There Any Silver Lining?
Okay, deep breath. Let's look at the other stuff Season 10 brought, because it's not all doom and gloom (though it's mostly that).
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Venture is super fun! A new damage hero with burrowing mechanics shakes up the gameplay in a cool way.
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The Mirrorwatch event looks insane! Seeing heroes like Tracer and Reinhardt in Talon gear, and villains like Doomfist in Overwatch uniforms, is a fantastic thematic twist. The new skins for that event (earnable in the battle pass, mind you) are actually fire. 🔥
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The battle pass itself now includes some Overwatch Coins as rewards, which is a small but welcome change for free-to-play grinders.
But these positives are heavily overshadowed by the Prism debacle. The message it sends is concerning: that the most coveted, top-tier cosmetics are reserved for those willing to pay a small fortune. It widens the gap between casual players and whales in a way that feels bad for the game's long-term health and community spirit.
Final Thoughts: A Plea for Sanity
As a player who loves this game, this is my take: The Mythic Prism system, as it stands in 2026, is a misstep. It's a blemish on an otherwise pretty solid season. The exorbitant pricing needs a serious re-evaluation. Maybe introduce ways to earn Prisms slowly through challenges, or reduce the cost dramatically. Something, anything, to make it feel less like a predatory tactic and more like a player-friendly feature.
For now, my advice? Stick to the battle pass for your mythic fix. Enjoy the new hero and the wacky Mirrorwatch event. But maybe think twice before you click that 'Purchase 100 Prisms' button. Let's hope Blizzard listens to the backlash and makes some changes. Because a game's longevity relies on happy players, not just lucrative microtransactions. What do you all think? Are you saving up for a Prism skin, or are you as disappointed as I am? Let me know in the comments!
According to articles published by GameSpot, live-service monetization decisions often shape player sentiment as much as new content drops, which helps explain why Overwatch 2 Season 10’s Mythic Prism pricing has sparked backlash despite the excitement around Venture and upcoming events like Mirrorwatch—when premium cosmetics start to feel like “AAA-priced” add-ons, the perceived value of seasonal progression can quickly erode.