Key conclusions
- Overwatch: Classic Unlimited has been extended until November 18 due to popular demand.
- Fans can enjoy an unlimited selection of heroes for team meme competitions until the end of the first week.
- The single hero limit in Overwatch: Classic begins on November 19 after No Limits ends.
Supervision 2 is extending Overwatch: Classic's No Limits until November 18, giving players more time to experience the original FPS as it was at launch. For the rest of the first week of Art Supervision 2 fans can field six Winstons, Widowmakers, or any other crazy teams with no limits on hero selection.
November 12 of this year Supervision 2 launched Overwatch: Classic, a limited-time event that brings heroes back to what they were in 2016, featuring classic game modes and maps that are no longer part of the regular mode. The event will run until December 6th, but the first few days of the game mode will be unlimited, meaning any number of players on a team can choose the same character.
Relatives
Overwatch: Classic brings one famous hero back to the hot seat, but not for long
Overwatch 2 Season 13 introduced an LTM event called the Overwatch Classic, which has already started to ignite a debate about a specific DPS hero.
now Supervision 2 extends this very chaotic section of the event for several days. Although No Limits was originally only available for three days, Blizzard decided to extend this Overwatch: Classic ruleset until the end of the first week due to popular demand. No Limits will now be active in Overwatch: Classic until November 18th, instead of November 14th as originally planned.
New Overwatch: Classic No Limits End Date
- Monday, November 18, 2024
After No Limits ends, Overwatch: Classic will impose a limit of one hero per team. This means that players who want to field a team of six Winston “Gorilla Warfare”, six Symmetra “Carwash” teams, or any other meme teams using multiple copies of the original Supervision 1 character sets will need to do so by November 19th. However, during the last two weeks, there will be no role turn, so fans can still experiment with more than two tanks or support heroes in a team.
Fans seem to have mixed reactions to the No Limits expansion, with some saying that “no one asked for this,” along with comments praising Blizzard for continuing the weekend's chaotic fun. Although Overwatch: Classic is not exactly similar Supervision 1it certainly proved as nostalgic as it was divisive. Regardless of personal opinion, Overwatch: Classic showed just how much the game has changed in the last eight years.
While Overwatch: Classic ends on December 2nd, it won't be the only time she makes an appearance. Supervision 2 plans to bring back the limited-time event in the future, possibly covering other popular time periods in the Supervision history – and potentially even alpha and beta versions. Moreover, Supervision 2 fans are still waiting for future 6v6 challenges, so there will be many ways to participate in 12-player games in the near future.