What are rarity colors in CS2?

In CS2, every skin comes with a rarity color. It’s basically Valve’s “tier system” for how often a skin appears and how valuable it can become on the market.

If you’re trying to understand why some skins cost a few cents and others cost more than your GPU, rarity colors are step one.

Important: Valve didn’t change the color list in CS2… but CS2 made the top tiers (purple and red) feel way more “special” in practice.

CS2 rarity colors list (simple + what they usually mean)

White — Consumer Grade

  • The most common tier

  • Usually comes from map collections

  • You’ll see these a lot in weekly drops

  • Great for beginners, not great for profit

Light Blue — Industrial Grade

  • Still common

  • Mostly from collections

  • These are the “I got a drop” skins you’ll see constantly

Blue — Mil-Spec Grade

  • The first tier that feels “real”

  • Core tier for both cases and contracts

  • Many popular budget skins live here

Purple — Restricted

  • Rare enough to feel exciting

  • In CS2, purple became a big deal because it’s often the highest tier you can realistically get from normal play/collection drops

  • Also important trade-up material

Pink — Classified

  • Very rare

  • Most commonly from cases or trade-ups

  • Usually where “premium” skins start

Red — Covert

  • Super rare

  • “Endgame” skins

  • In CS2, reds from collections feel especially scarce (and that affects pricing)

Gold — Special Items

  • Knives and gloves

  • Case-only

  • The jackpot tier

Quick cheat sheet (how players think about these tiers)

  • White: “free drop filler”

  • Light Blue: “solid skins / budget favorites”

  • Blue: “rare and hype”

  • Purple: “premium”

  • Red: “endgame / collectors”

  • Gold: “jackpot”

Where do “free CS2 skins” fit into rarity?

When people search free cs2 skins, they usually mean legit skins you can get without paying. In CS2 that typically means:

  • Weekly drops from playing (most often white/blue, sometimes blue)

  • Occasional case drops (a case is not a skin, but it can be sold/traded)

So yes, you can get some “free CS2 skins” through gameplay — but the super expensive tiers are still rare by design.

 

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