Overwatch Summer Games Cheat Sheet

​14 Days of Fortnite cheat sheet has been a popularly requested collection since Epic Games kicked off the holiday event in December. Since the challenges returned, players are scrambling to complete them as quick as possible for the rewards before they disappear.


Here's how to complete every 14 Days of ​Fortnite challenge.

14 Days of Fortnite has been extended for a limited time!
For the next week, drop in and complete any Challenges you may have missed out on to earn in-game rewards. pic.twitter.com/Y2Xd0ue9a4

— Fortnite (@FortniteGame) January 7, 2019

Home » Tag cloud » Summer in Mara. Summer in Mara - Dunna’s Island Walkthrough Guide. Summer in Mara - Shops & Prices. If you don't play the game for at least 30 days, your character will wake up with messy hair the next time you play and it will become one of the hairstyles you can select from your mirror. Contributed By: TomWake.

Overwatch Summer Games Cheat Sheet

14 Days of Fortnite Cheat Sheet

​Day 1: Join a Creative server.


Day 2: Find ​all of the giant candy canes on the map.


Day 3: Play ​three games with friends to unlock the Day 3 reward.


Day 4: Hit ​players with snowballs in different matches.


Day 5: Fly through ​five golden rings with the X-4 Stormwing plane.


Day 6: Search ​six waterside goose nests.


Day 7: Use a ​Boogie Bomb or Present seven times.


Day 8: ​Thank the bus driver eight times.


Day 9: ​Dance in front of nine Christmas trees.


Day 10: ​Do 10 vehicle tricks in 10 different locations.


Day 11: Thank the bus driver 11 times.


Overwatch Summer Games Cheat Sheet Cheat

Day 12: ​Find 12 snowflakes spread across the map.

Overwatch Summer Games Cheat Sheet Printable


Overwatch Summer Games 2020

Day 13: ​Place 13 items on a Fortnite Creative island.


Day 14: ​Search 14 different chests (multiple matches).


Hurry up and complete all of the challenges quickly as the ​14 Days of Fortnite ends soon.


Overwatch Summer Games Cheat Sheet Music

Photo courtesy of Epic Games

via toonzone.net

Blizzard has temporarily introduced an Olympics flavored mini-game to Overwatch with the introduction of the Overwatch Summer Games. This will be a confession of the initial pain the update gave me and how I still hate to play despite how fun it is.

The mini-game’s name, Lucio Ball, already paints a colorful picture. Although the idea of seasonal mods reminds of Dota 2’s Greevel games, the gameplay of Lucio Ball is just like Rocket League. Three players per team battle in a soccer cage to knock a ball in the opposing goal. Instead of driving supercharged monster cars, each player plays a Lucio. You can use his E and Q abilities just like in a regular game while his Shift is deactivated to keep him in high velocity mode. The team with the most goals at the end of a four minute countdown wins. Simple enough, right?

I’ve never been a fan of seasonal mini-games in any title. I prefer my games chiseled for purpose, like Chess.

I also think that Lucio Ball demonstrates Overwatch’s potential for custom games just like in the Starcraft and Warcraft days. Now that they’ve shown us a modding capacity, we’re stuck waiting for the tools. Blizzard should let the players mod their own maps and games so we can build the game together with the developers.

Nevertheless, Lucio Ball is still super fun to play. I mean, who doesn’t enjoy a game of Rocket League? So at least we can say that the Overwatch developers know how to select the upper echelon of garbage, when the garbage decision has already come to a close and can no longer be reverted. As pointless as it was to include a mini-game, at least Blizzard chose a very fun one.

I had a tough time coming up with reasons to play. Here are the only ones that came to mind.

  1. Blow off some steam and have some casual fun.
  2. Spend some time honing your Lucio skills.
  3. Play Rocket League without needing the game.
  4. Faster XP for your account.

Reason one is most convincing for the majority of people. The second reason is redundant because you can practice Lucio in a competitive environment instead. The third reason is just as useless, because players bought Overwatch to play Overwatch, and not Rocket League. The fourth reason is the only one with any weight. I didn’t run the numbers myself, but because each game of Lucio Ball is shorter than a regular game while giving almost the same amount of XP, it does seem like you gain levels faster by grinding Lucio Ball.

Either way, none of the above reasons persuade me, so I’ll be playing some regular Overwatch instead. I can’t spend my time on something that doesn’t guarantee progress.