How to get Ranked Play rewards in MW2

Earn what's yours.

Image via Activision

For ranked players in Call of Duty Modern Warfare 2, the satisfaction of defeating opponents in the highest tier of competition and climbing the ranks is reward enough, although very few people ended up passing Gold.

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But that satisfaction alone is not for everyone, which is why ranked rewards were introduced with the launch of CoD ranked play in season two.

Season two ranked players were promised a ton of rewards across various paths, including operator skins, charms, calling cards, and weapon blueprints. These were meant to be delivered at the end of season two, but Treyarch has acknowledged several ranked players have not received rewards yet, or have not received their intended rewards.

Here’s an update on the process and an explainer for how you can earn your hard-fought ranked rewards in MW2.

How to get Ranked Play rewards in MW2

Getting your Ranked Play rewards in MW2 is very straightforward. You will earn rewards for reaching a certain rank, you will earn rewards at the end of a season for the highest division you reach, and you will earn seasonal ranked rewards upon reaching certain amounts of wins.

Your rank rewards are earned with each milestone, up to 50. Every time you reach a milestone of five earned ranks, you will get a calling card and an additional emblem.

Don’t make fun of me. Image via Activision.

Division rewards are earned at the end of the season and are based on the highest division you reached. These are the rewards Treyarch says some players are yet to receive, so be patient if you’re waiting for your season two goodies.

Finally, you will earn rewards from the MW2 ranked season pass upon getting a certain amount of wins. This pass is free and will reward players with a sticker, weapon blueprint, charm, decal, loading screen, and camo.

So, get out there in season three and start grinding again!

Author
Image of Scott Robertson
Scott Robertson
VALORANT lead staff writer, also covering CS:GO, FPS games, other titles, and the wider esports industry. Watching and writing esports since 2014. Previously wrote for Dexerto, Upcomer, Splyce, and somehow MySpace. Jack of all games, master of none.