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Skin Bundle Guide9 min read

Glitchpop Bundle — Skins, Pricing, Variants & Is It Worth It? — Valorant

Complete guide to the Valorant Glitchpop Bundle. Every weapon skin, cyberpunk retro-futuristic aesthetic, VFX and audio breakdown, pricing, variants, and whether these Premium Edition skins are worth buying.

The Glitchpop Bundle is a Premium Edition skin collection built around a cyberpunk retro-futuristic aesthetic, released during Episode 1 Act 3 in October 2020. The Glitchpop skins imagine each weapon as a piece of overclocked technology from a neon-soaked digital future — bright magenta-and-blue neon plating, holographic circuit patterns, glitching pixel effects, and chunky angular weapon models that look like they were ripped from an arcade cabinet and weaponized. The collection radiates maximum visual energy — loud, colorful, unapologetically flashy — and represents the polar opposite of Valorant's darker, more restrained skin lines. With its playful inspect animations, vibrant particle effects, and one of the most distinctive visual identities in the game, the Glitchpop Bundle carved out the cyberpunk niche in Valorant's skin ecosystem and remains a beloved collection years after release. This guide covers every weapon skin, full pricing details, variants, and whether the bundle is worth your VP.

What Is the Glitchpop Bundle?

The Glitchpop Bundle is a Premium Edition skin collection built around the aesthetic of cyberpunk retro-futurism — a neon-drenched digital world where weapons are overclocked machines crackling with unstable energy. The design concept reimagines each weapon as hardware from a glitched-out future — bright magenta and electric blue neon plating over chunky angular frames, holographic circuit traces etched across weapon surfaces, and persistent digital glitch effects that make every skin look like it is constantly fighting to hold itself together.

Key Facts

  • Premium Edition tier — Glitchpop sits at the Premium Edition price tier alongside popular collections like Oni, Reaver, and Prime, offering custom VFX, audio, animations, finisher, and kill banner
  • Cyberpunk retro-futuristic aesthetic — the defining visual identity of Glitchpop is neon maximalism. Every weapon features bright magenta and electric blue neon plating over chunky, angular weapon models with holographic circuit patterns etched across surfaces, glitching pixel artifacts that shimmer and distort along weapon edges, exposed panel lines and chunky geometric protrusions that give each weapon an overbuilt, overclocked machine look, and persistent digital instability effects that make the skins feel alive with unstable energy
  • Glitching VFX — all weapon effects use bright neon particle systems with digital glitch motifs. Muzzle flashes emit bursts of pixelated neon energy, and the overall visual language conveys maximum digital spectacle — the opposite of subtle
  • Single collection with a sequel — the original Glitchpop Bundle includes five weapon skins released together in October 2020. A sequel collection, Glitchpop 2.0, was released in Episode 2 Act 2 in March 2021 with the Phantom, Vandal, Classic, Operator, and an Axe melee
  • Weapons included — Bulldog, Frenzy, Judge, Odin, and a Glitchpop Dagger melee
  • Electronic audio design — all Glitchpop skins feature digitally processed firing sounds with electronic synth undertones and glitchy audio artifacts. Each shot sounds like it is being fired through a digital synthesizer — bright, punchy, and distinctly artificial in a way that perfectly matches the neon aesthetic
  • Pixel-art finisher — the Glitchpop finisher dissolves the eliminated enemy into a burst of colorful pixel-art blocks that scatter and glitch through the air before a retro-styled digital explosion completes the effect — like watching a character get deleted from an arcade game
  • Digital glitch kill banner — an electronic glitch sound plays when the kill banner appears in the feed, with the banner itself featuring pixelated distortion effects
  • Four color variants — the default blue/pink plus three additional color variants unlockable with Radianite Points
  • Available in store rotation and Night Market — Glitchpop skins appear in daily store rotation and are eligible for Night Market discounts

Every Glitchpop Weapon Skin

Glitchpop Bulldog

The Glitchpop Bulldog is the most practical weapon in the original collection for standard competitive play. The Bulldog's frame is encased in chunky magenta and electric blue neon plating with angular geometric protrusions and holographic circuit traces running across the weapon body. The normally conservative Bulldog silhouette is transformed into something that looks like it belongs in a cyberpunk armory — overbuilt, neon-lit, and crackling with digital energy. Exposed panel seams glow with neon light, and subtle pixel-glitch effects shimmer along the weapon edges.

  • Firing audio — the Bulldog's burst-fire pattern receives a bright, punchy electronic treatment with digital synth layering. Each three-round burst has a distinct electronic snap — sharp, processed, and unmistakably digital. The burst cadence pairs well with the Glitchpop audio processing, giving each trigger pull a rhythmic electronic quality
  • Muzzle flash — bursts of pixelated neon energy in bright magenta and blue that scatter forward with each shot, trailing tiny digital artifacts that briefly linger before dissolving
  • Equip animation — a custom draw animation where the weapon powers up with surging neon energy, holographic circuit patterns flickering to life across the weapon body as digital glitch effects cascade along the frame
  • Finisher — the target dissolves into a burst of colorful pixel-art blocks that scatter and glitch through the air before a retro digital explosion completes the effect
  • Kill banner — a custom Glitchpop-themed kill banner with electronic glitch audio and pixelated distortion effects

The Glitchpop Bulldog is a solid skin for players who regularly buy the Bulldog on force-buy rounds. The 2,050-credit rifle is a common purchase when the team cannot afford Vandals and Phantoms, and the Glitchpop treatment gives it a visual presence that far exceeds its price tier. The electronic burst-fire audio is satisfying and makes force-buy rounds feel less like a compromise.

Glitchpop Frenzy

The Glitchpop Frenzy applies the cyberpunk treatment to the fully automatic sidearm, creating one of the more visually striking pistol skins in the game. The Frenzy's compact frame is wrapped in bright magenta and blue neon plating with miniaturized holographic circuit patterns and angular geometric elements that make the tiny pistol look like a futuristic machine pistol ripped from a neon dystopia. Despite its small size, the neon glow and digital effects give it a commanding visual presence on the draw.

  • Firing audio — the Frenzy's rapid automatic fire gets a bright, staccato electronic treatment. The fast fire rate creates a buzzing digital stream of processed shots — like a synthesizer being held down on full auto. The electronic audio processing is most noticeable on the Frenzy because of the sheer volume of shots fired in quick succession
  • Muzzle flash — rapid bursts of pixelated neon energy that strobe with the Frenzy's fast fire rate, creating a flickering neon light show at close range
  • Equip animation — quick neon power-up animation with digital glitch effects cascading across the compact frame
  • Finisher — the shared Glitchpop pixel-art dissolution finisher
  • Kill banner — the electronic glitch kill banner

The Glitchpop Frenzy is a fun pistol-round skin. The Frenzy is a popular pistol-round purchase at 450 credits, and the Glitchpop treatment makes pistol rounds feel more exciting. The rapid-fire electronic audio is especially satisfying when spraying down an opponent at close range during a pistol rush.

Glitchpop Judge

The Glitchpop Judge transforms the fully automatic shotgun into a neon-drenched close-quarters monster. The Judge's bulky frame is perfect for the Glitchpop aesthetic — the weapon's inherent chunkiness is amplified by angular neon plating, oversized geometric protrusions, and holographic circuit patterns that turn the shotgun into something that looks like a prototype energy weapon. Bright magenta and blue neon energy glows from every seam and vent, and the wide barrel housing features prominent glitch-effect detailing.

  • Firing audio — the Judge's automatic shotgun blasts receive a heavy, thumping electronic treatment with digital processing that gives each shot a synthetic weight. The fast fire rate of the Judge creates a rapid sequence of electronic booms — like a bass synthesizer being hammered in time with the trigger
  • Muzzle flash — wide bursts of pixelated neon energy that spread outward matching the shotgun's pellet spread, creating brief neon walls of particle effects at close range
  • Equip animation — neon power-up animation with the Judge's bulky frame lighting up with cascading digital effects
  • Finisher — the shared Glitchpop pixel-art dissolution finisher
  • Kill banner — the electronic glitch kill banner

The Glitchpop Judge is an excellent match of weapon and aesthetic. The Judge is already one of the most in-your-face weapons in Valorant — a fully automatic shotgun designed for aggressive close-range ambushes — and the loud, neon cyberpunk treatment amplifies that aggressive identity. Getting a multi-kill Judge spray with Glitchpop effects is pure visual chaos.

Glitchpop Odin

The Glitchpop Odin applies the cyberpunk aesthetic to the heavy machine gun, creating one of the most visually imposing weapon skins in the collection. The Odin's large frame is a natural canvas for the Glitchpop design — the weapon's size allows for expansive neon plating, prominent holographic circuit patterns, and large angular geometric elements that make the heavy weapon look like an industrial-grade piece of future technology. Bright magenta and blue neon energy radiates from the weapon body, and the Odin's belt-fed ammunition system is reimagined with glowing digital elements.

  • Firing audio — the Odin's sustained heavy fire gets a deep, rolling electronic treatment that builds in intensity as the weapon spins up. The wind-up mechanic is complemented by rising electronic tones, and once at full speed the Odin produces a continuous stream of heavy digital bass-boosted impacts — like a synthesized industrial machine running at maximum output
  • Muzzle flash — sustained bursts of pixelated neon energy that create a persistent neon glow at the barrel during sustained fire, with digital artifacts streaming outward
  • Equip animation — a dramatic neon power-up animation that cascades across the Odin's large frame, with holographic elements activating sequentially along the weapon body
  • Finisher — the shared Glitchpop pixel-art dissolution finisher
  • Kill banner — the electronic glitch kill banner

The Glitchpop Odin is a fun skin for players who enjoy the occasional Odin wall-bang or chokepoint suppression strategy. The heavy weapon is situational in competitive play but devastating when deployed correctly, and the Glitchpop treatment makes the Odin feel like a futuristic siege weapon. The electronic wind-up audio adds extra menace to the Odin's already intimidating suppression role.

Glitchpop Dagger (Melee)

The Glitchpop Dagger is a distinctive melee weapon designed as a chunky cyberpunk blade with bright neon plating and holographic edge detailing. The blade features angular geometric construction with magenta and blue neon energy running along the cutting edges, holographic circuit patterns etched into the flat of the blade, and persistent digital glitch effects that make the weapon shimmer with unstable energy. The overall design evokes a high-tech combat knife from a digital future — functional but ostentatious.

  • Primary attack — a slashing motion with bright neon energy trails that linger briefly, leaving pixelated streaks of magenta and blue light with each swing
  • Secondary attack — a backstab animation with a surge of digital energy and a heavy electronic impact sound with pixelated particle burst
  • Inspect animation — the dagger rotates to display its neon detailing from multiple angles, with holographic elements flickering and digital glitch effects intensifying during the inspection. The Glitchpop inspect is one of the more visually engaging melee inspections in the game
  • Equip animation — the dagger materializes with a burst of neon energy and cascading digital glitch effects as the blade powers up

The Glitchpop Dagger is a solid melee skin with strong visual identity. The neon edge lighting makes the blade visible and distinctive during gameplay, and the inspect animation gives you something entertaining to watch during pre-round. The cyberpunk blade design is unique in the melee skin pool and stands out against the more traditional knife and axe options.

Glitchpop Bundle Pricing Breakdown

Glitchpop skins are priced at the Premium Edition tier, which delivers custom VFX, audio, animations, finisher, and kill banner — the full suite of cosmetic upgrades short of a reactive kill counter (which is exclusive to Ultra Edition skins).

Individual Item Prices

| Item | Approximate Price | |------|------------------| | Glitchpop Bulldog | 1,775 VP | | Glitchpop Frenzy | 1,775 VP | | Glitchpop Judge | 1,775 VP | | Glitchpop Odin | 1,775 VP | | Glitchpop Dagger (Melee) | 3,550 VP |

Bundle Price

  • Glitchpop bundle: approximately 7,100 VP — all five items together at a bundle discount
  • Individual items total: approximately 10,650 VP — buying all five items separately at full price costs substantially more
  • Bundle discount: approximately 33% savings — consistent with other Premium Edition bundle pricing

VP Cost in Real Money

| VP Amount | Approximate USD | |-----------|----------------| | 1,000 VP | $9.99 | | 2,050 VP | $19.99 | | 3,650 VP | $34.99 | | 5,350 VP | $49.99 | | 11,000 VP | $99.99 |

To buy the full Glitchpop bundle at approximately 7,100 VP, the combination of 5,350 VP ($49.99) plus 2,050 VP ($19.99) gives you 7,400 VP for about $70, which covers the bundle with a small amount of VP remaining. Alternatively, 3,650 VP ($34.99) plus 3,650 VP ($34.99) gives you 7,300 VP for about $70. The full Glitchpop bundle is a roughly $70 investment at Premium Edition pricing — comparable to other Premium Edition collections like Oni, Reaver, and Prime.

If you only want the Bulldog at 1,775 VP, the 2,050 VP pack ($19.99) covers it with VP remaining for a future purchase. However, since the original Glitchpop bundle does not include the Phantom or Vandal, many players interested in the Glitchpop aesthetic prefer to target the Glitchpop 2.0 collection instead, which includes both primary rifles.

Variants and Radianite Costs

Each Glitchpop weapon skin has four color variants, with the base blue/pink variant included at purchase and three additional variants unlockable with Radianite Points.

| Variant | Description | |---------|-------------| | Default (Blue/Pink) | The signature Glitchpop look — bright magenta and electric blue neon plating with holographic circuit patterns and pixelated glitch effects. The blue/pink palette is pure cyberpunk maximalism — loud, vibrant, and impossible to miss. Included with purchase | | Gold | A luxurious reinterpretation with warm gold and amber neon plating replacing the cool blue/pink tones. The gold variant transforms the cyberpunk aesthetic into something opulent and prestigious — like a limited-edition prototype weapon plated in digital gold. The holographic elements shift to warm golden hues and the overall effect is striking and unique | | Red/Black | Dark plating with vivid red neon accents and crimson circuit patterns. The red/black variant strips away the playful neon energy for something more aggressive and menacing — a cyberpunk weapon running in combat mode. Popular with players who want the Glitchpop design language with a darker, more serious edge | | Blue/Green | Cool-toned plating with cyan and green neon accents. The blue/green variant shifts the palette toward a more classic sci-fi identity — like a weapon from a hacker's toolkit rather than a neon nightclub. The green-tinted holographic effects give the weapons an eerie digital quality |

  • Radianite cost per variant level: 10 Radianite Points — Premium Edition skins have lower Radianite costs than Ultra Edition skins
  • Total Radianite per weapon for all variants: approximately 30 Radianite Points — unlocking all three additional variants on one weapon
  • Radianite for all weapons: approximately 150 Radianite Points — unlocking every variant across all five items in the bundle
  • Radianite is earned through the Battle Pass — regular Battle Pass completion provides Radianite to upgrade your skins over time, and Premium Edition collections are more achievable to fully upgrade than Ultra Edition ones
  • The gold variant is a community standout — while the default blue/pink defines the Glitchpop identity, the gold variant is widely regarded as one of the best color variants in the entire game across all skin lines. The warm gold tones over the cyberpunk design create a look that is both luxurious and futuristic

Is the Glitchpop Bundle Worth It?

The Glitchpop Bundle occupies the cyberpunk niche in Valorant's skin ecosystem. Its value proposition rests on one of the most distinctive visual identities in the game, playful and energetic VFX, a unique neon aesthetic that no other skin line replicates, and Premium Edition pricing — but the original bundle's weapon selection limits its competitive practicality.

Reasons to Buy

  • The most distinctive visual identity in the game — no other skin line in Valorant looks anything like Glitchpop. The neon cyberpunk aesthetic with holographic circuits, pixel-art effects, and chunky angular designs is completely unique. If you want skins that are instantly recognizable and visually loud, Glitchpop has no competition
  • The gold variant is legendary — the Glitchpop gold variant is frequently cited as one of the best color variants in all of Valorant. The warm gold plating over the cyberpunk design creates a premium look that transcends the skin line's playful identity and appeals even to players who normally prefer darker aesthetics
  • Fun, energetic VFX and audio — the electronic audio, pixelated muzzle effects, and glitchy particle systems create a playful, high-energy experience that makes every gunfight more entertaining. Glitchpop skins feel fun to use in a way that more serious skin lines do not
  • The pixel-art finisher is unique — the dissolving pixel-block finisher with its retro arcade-game aesthetic is unlike any other finisher in the game. It is colorful, playful, and immediately recognizable
  • Premium Edition pricing is accessible — at approximately $70 for the full bundle, the Glitchpop collection is significantly more affordable than Ultra Edition bundles
  • Four color variants with strong options — the default blue/pink, gold, red/black, and blue/green provide substantial visual range. The gold variant alone is worth the Radianite investment
  • Glitchpop 2.0 expands the collection — the March 2021 sequel collection adds the Phantom, Vandal, Classic, Operator, and an Axe melee, allowing you to build a complete Glitchpop loadout across both collections that covers the most important weapon categories
  • Available in store rotation and Night Market — individual skins appear in your daily store and are eligible for Night Market discounts of 20-50%

Reasons to Skip

  • No Phantom or Vandal in the original bundle — the original Glitchpop collection does not include either primary rifle. The Bulldog, Frenzy, Judge, and Odin are all situational weapons that most players do not buy every round. For players who want a Glitchpop rifle, Glitchpop 2.0 is the essential collection — not the original
  • All four weapons are niche picks — the Bulldog is a force-buy rifle, the Frenzy is a pistol-round sidearm, the Judge is a close-range gamble, and the Odin is a situational heavy. None of these weapons are part of the standard full-buy loadout, which dramatically limits how often you will actually see and use these skins in competitive play
  • The aesthetic is not for everyone — Glitchpop is the loudest, most colorful skin line in Valorant. Players who prefer clean, minimal designs or dark, serious aesthetics may find the neon cyberpunk look distracting or garish. The skins demand attention, and not everyone wants their weapons to be the visual center of every frame
  • Released in 2020 — older model quality — while the Glitchpop aesthetic remains unique, the weapon models are from 2020 and do not match the geometric complexity of newer Premium and Ultra Edition skins. Glitchpop 2.0 refined the design language with updated models
  • Competes with Glitchpop 2.0 — players interested in the Glitchpop aesthetic are generally better served by investing in Glitchpop 2.0, which includes the Phantom, Vandal, and Operator — the three most important weapons for competitive play. The original bundle's niche weapon selection makes it a harder sell when the sequel exists
  • No reactive kill counter — as a Premium Edition skin line, Glitchpop does not include a reactive kill counter. The cyberpunk aesthetic would pair naturally with a digital kill counter, but that feature is exclusive to Ultra Edition skins

Verdict

The Glitchpop Bundle is a style-first collection with a weapon selection that limits its competitive utility. The cyberpunk aesthetic is unmatched in Valorant — no other skin line delivers the same neon energy, playful VFX, and retro-futuristic personality. The gold variant alone is one of the most coveted color options in the game. But the original bundle's weapon roster of Bulldog, Frenzy, Judge, and Odin means you will only see these skins in force-buy rounds, pistol rounds, and situational heavy purchases.

For players who love the Glitchpop aesthetic, the practical path is to prioritize Glitchpop 2.0 for the Phantom and Vandal, then supplement with original Glitchpop skins for the weapons that 2.0 does not cover. The Bulldog is the most useful weapon in the original bundle for competitive play, as it is the most common force-buy rifle.

If you are considering the full bundle at approximately $70, ask yourself how often you buy the Bulldog, Judge, and Odin. If you regularly use these weapons and want the complete Glitchpop loadout across both collections, the original bundle fills the gaps that 2.0 leaves. If you primarily play with the Phantom and Vandal, direct your VP toward Glitchpop 2.0 instead.

The Glitchpop Dagger is a solid melee option with a distinctive cyberpunk identity, but the Glitchpop 2.0 Axe is often preferred for its larger visual presence. If melee is your priority, compare both before committing.

Glitchpop in the Valorant Skin Landscape

How Glitchpop Compares to Other Popular Skin Lines

  • Glitchpop vs Oni — Oni is Valorant's iconic Japanese demon skin line with dark crimson samurai armor, ghostly supernatural energy, and haunting audio. Glitchpop is the aesthetic opposite — bright, colorful, playful, and futuristic. Oni channels ancient supernatural menace; Glitchpop channels neon digital chaos. Both are Premium Edition collections released in 2020 with sequel collections, but they target completely opposite style preferences. Oni appeals to players who want dark, serious aesthetics; Glitchpop appeals to players who want maximum visual personality and color
  • Glitchpop vs Prime — Prime is clean, geometric, and universally appealing with smooth audio and a polished sci-fi look. Glitchpop is maximalist, loud, and deliberately over-the-top with electronic audio and chaotic VFX. Both occupy futuristic territory but with radically different philosophies — Prime is refined futurism, Glitchpop is punk futurism. Prime covers the Vandal and Phantom in its original collection; the original Glitchpop covers neither, though 2.0 covers both
  • Glitchpop vs Reaver — Reaver is Valorant's dark gothic skin line with spectral green energy and haunting audio. The two collections are polar opposites in tone — Reaver is somber, eerie, and restrained; Glitchpop is energetic, colorful, and loud. Both are Premium Edition with strong audio identities, but they appeal to entirely different aesthetic preferences. Reaver covers the Vandal in its original set; the original Glitchpop covers neither primary rifle
  • Glitchpop vs Glitchpop 2.0 — Glitchpop 2.0 is the direct sequel collection released in March 2021, featuring the Phantom, Vandal, Classic, Operator, and an Axe melee. Glitchpop 2.0 refines the cyberpunk design language with updated weapon models while maintaining the neon identity. The two collections are designed to complement each other — the original covers the Bulldog, Frenzy, Judge, and Odin, while 2.0 covers the Phantom, Vandal, Classic, and Operator. Together they provide comprehensive weapon coverage with a unified cyberpunk aesthetic
  • Glitchpop vs Spectrum — Spectrum is Valorant's Zedd-collaboration music-themed skin line with reactive audio elements and a DJ-inspired aesthetic. Both Glitchpop and Spectrum lean into flashy, colorful, high-energy territory with electronic audio identities. The key difference is that Spectrum is music-reactive with audio that responds to gameplay, while Glitchpop is cyberpunk-themed with consistent digital glitch effects. Spectrum is Ultra Edition with higher pricing; Glitchpop is Premium Edition and more accessible

Community Reception

The Glitchpop Bundle has maintained a dedicated fanbase since its release and holds a unique position in Valorant's skin ecosystem:

  • The gold variant is an all-time community favorite — across community polls and tier lists, the Glitchpop gold variant is consistently rated as one of the best color variants in the entire game. The warm gold neon over cyberpunk geometry creates a look that appeals even to players who would not normally choose Glitchpop's default blue/pink palette
  • Defined the cyberpunk niche — Glitchpop established that Valorant's skin ecosystem had room for loud, colorful, maximalist designs alongside the darker skin lines that dominated early collections. Its success proved that a significant portion of the player base wanted skins with personality and visual energy
  • The aesthetic is polarizing by design — Glitchpop consistently ranks as one of the most divisive skin lines in community tier lists. Players either love the neon maximalism or find it too visually loud. This polarization is part of its identity — Glitchpop is not trying to appeal to everyone, and its dedicated fans appreciate that commitment to a strong aesthetic vision
  • Glitchpop 2.0 elevated the brand — the sequel collection's inclusion of the Phantom, Vandal, and Operator addressed the original's biggest weakness and made the full Glitchpop loadout competitively viable. The 2.0 Vandal and Phantom are widely used and have dedicated followings
  • The Dagger remains a popular melee — the Glitchpop Dagger's compact design and neon edge lighting have kept it popular as a melee choice, particularly among players who prefer blade-style melees over the larger Axe option from 2.0
  • Inspect animations are a highlight — the Glitchpop inspect animations are frequently cited as some of the most entertaining in the game. The holographic elements and digital effects give players something visually engaging during pre-round downtime

Tips for Buying Glitchpop Skins

  • Prioritize Glitchpop 2.0 for primary rifles — if you want the Glitchpop aesthetic on the weapons you use most, the Phantom and Vandal are in the 2.0 collection. Start there for maximum competitive impact before considering the original bundle
  • The Bulldog is the best value in the original bundle — if you are choosing a single skin from the original collection, the Bulldog is the most practical. It is the most commonly purchased force-buy rifle and you will see it more often than the Frenzy, Judge, or Odin in competitive play
  • Unlock the gold variant — whatever Glitchpop skins you own, budget Radianite for the gold variant. It is widely considered one of the best color options in all of Valorant and transforms the Glitchpop aesthetic from playful cyberpunk to luxurious cyberpunk
  • Buy individually unless you use niche weapons — the original Glitchpop bundle's weapon roster means the full bundle is only cost-effective if you regularly use the Bulldog, Judge, and Odin. If you primarily want one or two skins, buying through the daily store is more efficient
  • Wait for your daily store — individual Glitchpop skins appear in the daily store rotation. If you only want the Bulldog or Dagger, checking your store daily is far more cost-effective than buying the full bundle
  • Watch for Night Market — Glitchpop skins are eligible for Night Market discounts of 20-50%. A Premium Edition skin at Night Market prices can cost as little as 900-1,400 VP, making individual purchases excellent value
  • Pair original and 2.0 for complete coverage — the original Glitchpop covers Bulldog, Frenzy, Judge, Odin, and a Dagger melee. Glitchpop 2.0 covers Phantom, Vandal, Classic, Operator, and an Axe melee. Together the two collections provide one of the most comprehensive single-theme loadouts in Valorant
  • Budget for Radianite upgrades — the VFX, audio, and finisher are locked behind Radianite upgrades. Budget at least 30 Radianite Points to unlock the full upgrade path on your primary skin (VFX, audio, finisher). Variants cost an additional 10 Radianite each

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