Image via Blizzard Entertainment

Overwatch League players show off Overwatch 2 in first pro exhibition match

Fans got a first look at the peak potential of one of the sequel's new modes, Push.

After the announcement that the fifth season of the Overwatch League would be played on an early build of Overwatch 2, the biggest question on most fans’ minds was how professionals would adapt to the myriad of changes coming in the sequel. 

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Overwatch League players stepped up to play an Overwatch 2 exhibition match during the league’s Grand Finals broadcast and display the sequel’s competitive potential, especially with its switch to five vs. five rosters.

Ten players from the Washington Justice and Los Angeles Gladiators joined forces to create two five-man rosters. These new teams tested one of Overwatch 2’s new game modes, Push, and tackled it from a professional perspective. This match was also one of the first in-depth looks at Rome, one of Overwatch 2’s new Push maps.  

The players wasted no time diving into new content, and both teams fielded a Sombra and Bastion when the exhibition match kicked off. The Overwatch League broadcast revealed reworks of the two DPS heroes earlier today, making them shiny new toys to try. Bastion’s new ultimate, Artillery Strike, was a big hit during the Push map. 

Other players stuck to their newly updated standby heroes, with Gladiators support players Kim “Shu” Jin-seo and Grant “moth” Espe going for Ana and Mercy, respectively. Both support kits remained relatively unchanged but received quality-of-life improvements, like enhanced UI updates for Mercy.

It was impossible to miss the importance of singular tanks in the compositions. Indy “Space” Halpern, off-tank for the Los Angeles Gladiators, tried his hand at Reinhardt’s enhanced abilities. Reinhardt’s Charge can now be controlled and aimed, so both main tank players were zooming across the map at full speed. 

We also learned a bit more about Push itself in this exhibition match. Spawn points change locations based on achieving “checkpoints” on the route, much like with a Hybrid or Escort map in Overwatch’s current iteration. The mode’s robot, named T.W.O., is also much faster than expected, seeming to exceed the speed of our usual payloads. 

“It takes a little bit from Control and it takes a little bit from [Escort],” game director Aaron Keller said, noting that Push was built for fights to occur all over the map instead of at certain places.  

In the end, Space’s “Team 1” took home the win, but the amount of concrete data we now have about the professional potential of Overwatch 2 is more valuable than any accolade. 

Keller told the analyst desk that the key element the designers wanted to carry over to Overwatch 2 was the sense of teamwork the game requires. “You can’t accomplish everything by yourself in Overwatch,” he said. “We really wanted to preserve that. Push does it.”  


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Author
Liz Richardson
Liz is a freelance writer and editor from Chicago. Her favorite thing is the Overwatch League; her second favorite thing is pretending iced coffee is a meal. She specializes in educational content, patch notes that (actually) make sense, and aggressively supporting Tier 2 Overwatch. When she's not writing, Liz is expressing hot takes on Twitter and making bad life choices at Target.